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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Marriage Invite

Hi there,

I would like to invite my uncle to my marriage, what is the correct usage of words?

Thanks
  

Top answer

Anonymous I would like to invite my uncle to my marriage You are inviting him to your wedding, not to your marriage. The wedding is a short ceremony. The marriage lasts the rest of your life.

  • Anonymous I would like to invite my uncle to my marriage You are inviting him to your wedding, not to your marriage.
  • The wedding is a short ceremony.
  • The marriage lasts the rest of your life.
  • Send the same invitation to your uncle that you send to everyone you invite.
  • There are many samples available on the web.
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6 Answers
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AnonymousI would like to invite my uncle to my marriage
You are inviting him to your wedding, not to your marriage. The wedding is a short ceremony. The marriage lasts the rest of your life.

Send the same invitation to your uncle that you send to everyone you invite. There are many samples available on the web. Here's one you can use as a model.
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Thanks for correcting me.
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My uncle is in the USA. Can I send the below :
You'll be glad to know that, my wedding has been fixed on Sept 25. I would like to invite everyone to my wedding. Please book your calendar ASAP. Please do come.
Thanks
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AnonymousCan I send the below
Yes. It's very informal, but that's OK. (No comma after 'that'. And use 'set for' instead of 'fixed on'.)

CJ
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"Letting you know at the earliest" is the right sentence?
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Anonymous"Letting you know at the earliest" is the right sentence?
Please ask new questions in a new thread. Don't append your questions to an unrelated thread.

CJ

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