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Youssefdir Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Request a quote

You might have heard about RFQ or Request For Quotation. I want to use the expression "Quote for an item", like if I had items to sell. Is it correct?
  

Top answer

It depends on the complete sentence. eg One often says "I'm going to issue an RFQ". What would you say instead?

  • It depends on the complete sentence.
  • eg One often says "I'm going to issue an RFQ".
  • What would you say instead?
  • Clive
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4 Answers
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It depends on the complete sentence.
eg One often says "I'm going to issue an RFQ".
What would you say instead?

Clive
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It's an invitation through a button in a website where the potential customer clicks on it and gets to know the price of a product according to his/her selection of items within.
It's an application on the web that will lead him/her towards knowing the price.
I wanted to use not too technical acronym such as RFQ, instead a more friendly one like "Quote for the product".
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You don't want to say simply PRICE?

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