0
Hly2004 Posted 21 years ago
Grammar

pleasure/pleased

When a cooperation is closed, Shall I say "It's a pleasure to cooperate with you" or "We're pleased cooperating with you."? Which one sound formal and more commonly used?Thank you in advance!
  

Top answer

Most common are: It's been a pleasure to work with you. (It's=It has) It's been a pleasure working with you. It's been a pleasure working with you on the xyz project.

  • Most common are: It's been a pleasure to work with you.
  • (It's=It has) It's been a pleasure working with you.
  • It's been a pleasure working with you on the xyz project.
  • And these are fairly formal sounding expressions.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
Most common are:
It's been a pleasure to work with you. (It's=It has)
It's been a pleasure working with you.
It's been a pleasure working with you on the xyz project.

And these are fairly formal sounding expressions.
0
I agree with you, My origianl version is "It's a pleasure to cooperate with you"

However, I find "It has been a pleasure" is much more accurate (,which indicates the entire process). My questions are why using "work with" instead of "cooperate with", and as "It has been a pleasure" is said at the end of cooperation, Can say "Wish we have a happy cooperation" at the beginning of the co
0
It just sounds odd to say "It's been a pleasure to cooperate with you." It sounds like Chinese-English, not American-English.

If you want to say "cooperate" it is common to say "Thanks for your cooperation and it's been a pleasure working with you."

Related Questions