You've rightly called out the differences between the first two statements: He is in a meeting . The above statement refers to the person attending a meeting in the same premises (i.e. on site).
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Use Please instead of kindly- Please find the attached...If your are giving them information that you want them to know then you can use"for your information" if your are giving them something you would like them to be able to refer to then use"for your reference."
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Having said that, I think there is a tinge of racism to not accept e.g."Myself X" as proper English. My reason for this is no one says that calling a friend"mate" or"dude" is annoying or wrong english.
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The requested modifications have been completed.. is better, because you are referring to a continuing action (you finished writing the code, but it will get tested next).
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In email writing, when we are attaching any document, what is the correct, formal and more polite way to write: Please find attached"Monthly status report" PDF for your reference. Please find
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1. These all mean basically the same thing -- some arbitrary months in the near future:"in coming months"."in the next few months" (this may suggest more immediacy than other options, but not necessarily)"in the upcoming months" (this is awkward and uncommon) This means next month:"next month". These are not valid:
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Sometimes in English, a word can be used indistinctively regarding its meaning, it depends on the context. However,"upcoming" refers to an event, a situation that is going to happen in the near future like a concert, festival, etc."Forthcoming" usually refers to something/an object that will soon be available, reachable, published.
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