Yes, if the executive assistant had been writing a formal letter, he would have written In my opinion it is perfectly acceptable for a moderator to say we look forward to hearing your presentation immediately before the presentation is given. However, he was writing a very quick email to one one of his [fellow] employees, the message was a simple instruction and he therefore wrote with.
To look forward for might be used where you mean to look forward to be a metaphor for to concentrate on the future, and for to be a normal prepositional use First of all, you need to change hear to hearing in your first example I am looking forward for my children
Someone asks you if you have certain data, which he needs, and you say yes Which would you say, 1 or 2 What's the difference between them I'll be forwarding them on to you
I'll be forwarding them to you. Hello everyone, what is the right sentence between the following 1) i wanted to ask to you about the protocol i forwarded to you 2) i wanted to ask to you about the protocol i forwarded you
I / you / we / they forward our mail to the central office He / she / it forwards our mail automatically He / she / it forwarded all our mail last month to china while we were away on assignment Like cyberpedant, i don't understand the problem
Forwarded is the past participle of to forward. I know that after preposition you should use whom and not who How about whoever and whomever Please forward this email to whoever is working on the project
Looking forward to meet/see/welcome you Look forward to meeting/seeing/welcoming you Using ing with look, like in first sentence we don't have to use ing with verb (see, meet etc) and in second sentence look without ing and verb with ing, are my sentences right? Hello, the following is about i look forward to hearing from you. and i'm looking forward to hearing from you. and its differences
How would you opine on that Do you agree or not Actually, the register has nothing to do with it The difference is how the speaker perceives their own.