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Pamela81 Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

To have experience in or to be experienced in?

Hi,

please check my sentence and let me know if it is correct:

"Mr. XXX is experienced in handing over our stands in Germany" or "Mr.XXX has a lot of experience in handing over our stands in Germany" ?

please also this one:

"Mr.XXX is in charge of handing over our stands in Germany"

Thank you for your reply in advance

Pamela
  

Top answer

What do you mean by 'handing over'?

  • What do you mean by 'handing over'?
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6 Answers
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What do you mean by 'handing over'?
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Hi,
I mean the moment when the stand is given directly to the customer. We usually use this verb in all our documents when speaking about this special situation. Is it wrong?
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It seems too casual to me.

"Mr. *** is experienced in delivering our stands in Germany"
"Mr.*** has a lot of experience delivering our stands in Germany"
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Dear Mr.Micawber,

I appreciate your help but can you explain what do you mean by "casual" ? In Italian I translate "casuale"so I don´t understand very well the meaning in this special case.

"To deliver"is a verb I know well but I thought that you deliver things through post or cur
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'Handing over' is hardly business-like. I think I like what I gave you.
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Ok. thanks... I believe you are suggesting the best way to say.

Best wishes

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