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Sky1941 Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

"In question" usage

Hello,



English is my second language and I use it everyday at my work. I wanted to check if I’m using the adjective “in question” properly.



I receive a ticket from a user then I need to take that ticket number and process it and give it a number. After that, I need to send an e-mail to a group to further process the request, this is the body of the e-mail that I send, keep in mind that the title is the task number which they need in order to access it:





____________________________________

Dear Gents,



Please provide the user in question with VPN access.



Regards,

____________________________________







Now, one of that group is accusing me of misusing the “in question” here. Please tell me if I’m using it correctly or not.



Thank you.
  

Top answer

Well, I understand what you are trying to say, but 'in question' does not seem the most appropriate, since the user is not really under discussion (i n question = under consideration; in dispute ). I think the safest approach is ' please provide the user of ticket #. '.

  • Well, I understand what you are trying to say, but 'in question' does not seem the most appropriate, since the user is not really under discussion (i n question = under consideration; in dispute ).
  • I think the safest approach is ' please provide the user of ticket #.
  • '.
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1 Answers
0
Well, I understand what you are trying to say, but 'in question' does not seem the most appropriate, since the user is not really under discussion (in question = under consideration; in dispute). I think the safest approach is 'please provide the user of ticket #...'.

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