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Anonymous Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

Sentence assistance

I am not sure how to say this:

Thanks for sharing your communication with Mr. Steve.
Thanks for forwarding the exchange of messages between you and Mr. Steve.

Which of the above are correct and please give me some other ways of saying this along with correcting the ones above.

Thank you very much.
  

Top answer

In English, we do not use 'Mr' with a person's first name. Use either the last name, or use the first name only: with Mr. Smith with Steve

  • In English, we do not use 'Mr' with a person's first name.
  • Use either the last name, or use the first name only: with Mr.
  • Smith with Steve
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18 Answers
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In English, we do not use 'Mr' with a person's first name. Use either the last name, or use the first name only:

with Mr. Smith
with Steve
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Got it, thanks. So are both sentences correct?

And do you have other suggestions?
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Anonymous. So are both sentences correct?
Both are grammatically correct; both sound a bit awkward to me.

Thanks for forwarding your message to Steve.
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But he forwarded it to me. He communicated with steve and forwarded it to me, that is why I want to thank him for sharing his communication with him.
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AnonymousBut he forwarded it to me.
That's what my revised sentence says.
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Thank you for forwarding Steve's messages and your responses to him. I appreciate it.
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Your message does not convey that they have been communicating and one of them shared their communication with me. I want to thank one of them for sharing their conversation and/or exchange of emails.
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Dear John;

Thank you for forwarding the email correspondence between yourself and Steve to me.
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Isn't there a simpler way of thanking him on that. Doesn't the one I wrote convey the matter, when saying the communication such as in my first sentence? Or if you can enhance it to make it clearer.
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Yeah. I like that one Emotion: smile

Just curious, do these convey the same information. If not, could you change them to do so:
Than

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