Is the expression “in seek of” acceptable?
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2
down vote
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Is this sentence correct, or are there better ways to express it:
In seek of an ideal start for my career, I am applying for the PhD program at your school.
Am I using the wrong verb here, should I use instead, in search of ?
What formulaic expressions or phrases could I use in place of in seek of?
I am looking for something formal, but also native-like.
expressions phrase-requests formality
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
Is this sentence correct, or are there better ways to express it:
In seek of an ideal start for my career, I am applying for the PhD program at your school.
Am I using the wrong verb here, should I use instead, in search of ?
What formulaic expressions or phrases could I use in place of in seek of?
I am looking for something formal, but also native-like.
expressions phrase-requests formality
You might be looking for this expression It's important to get off on the right foot in this new job. So, you could write: “In order for my career to start off on the right foot, I am applying...”
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:33
If you dislike or feel uncomfortable with my edit you can rollback to the previous version, but if you do show some minimal research, users will be more inclined to answer. Good luck!
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:49
Please do not edit the question to remove it altogether. If you are not happy with how the question is presented, feel free to improve it; but removing the essential parts of it completely just invalidates the answers you’ve received and makes it a non-question.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
Is this sentence correct, or are there better ways to express it:
In seek of an ideal start for my career, I am applying for the PhD program at your school.
Am I using the wrong verb here, should I use instead, in search of ?
What formulaic expressions or phrases could I use in place of in seek of?
I am looking for something formal, but also native-like.
expressions phrase-requests formality
Is this sentence correct, or are there better ways to express it:
In seek of an ideal start for my career, I am applying for the PhD program at your school.
Am I using the wrong verb here, should I use instead, in search of ?
What formulaic expressions or phrases could I use in place of in seek of?
I am looking for something formal, but also native-like.
expressions phrase-requests formality
expressions phrase-requests formality
edited 1 hour ago
Janus Bahs Jacquet
29.2k568125
29.2k568125
asked Nov 29 '15 at 8:51
David Xiaoyu Xu
1113
1113
You might be looking for this expression It's important to get off on the right foot in this new job. So, you could write: “In order for my career to start off on the right foot, I am applying...”
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:33
If you dislike or feel uncomfortable with my edit you can rollback to the previous version, but if you do show some minimal research, users will be more inclined to answer. Good luck!
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:49
Please do not edit the question to remove it altogether. If you are not happy with how the question is presented, feel free to improve it; but removing the essential parts of it completely just invalidates the answers you’ve received and makes it a non-question.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
add a comment |
You might be looking for this expression It's important to get off on the right foot in this new job. So, you could write: “In order for my career to start off on the right foot, I am applying...”
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:33
If you dislike or feel uncomfortable with my edit you can rollback to the previous version, but if you do show some minimal research, users will be more inclined to answer. Good luck!
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:49
Please do not edit the question to remove it altogether. If you are not happy with how the question is presented, feel free to improve it; but removing the essential parts of it completely just invalidates the answers you’ve received and makes it a non-question.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
You might be looking for this expression It's important to get off on the right foot in this new job. So, you could write: “In order for my career to start off on the right foot, I am applying...”
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:33
You might be looking for this expression It's important to get off on the right foot in this new job. So, you could write: “In order for my career to start off on the right foot, I am applying...”
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:33
If you dislike or feel uncomfortable with my edit you can rollback to the previous version, but if you do show some minimal research, users will be more inclined to answer. Good luck!
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:49
If you dislike or feel uncomfortable with my edit you can rollback to the previous version, but if you do show some minimal research, users will be more inclined to answer. Good luck!
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:49
Please do not edit the question to remove it altogether. If you are not happy with how the question is presented, feel free to improve it; but removing the essential parts of it completely just invalidates the answers you’ve received and makes it a non-question.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
Please do not edit the question to remove it altogether. If you are not happy with how the question is presented, feel free to improve it; but removing the essential parts of it completely just invalidates the answers you’ve received and makes it a non-question.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
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up vote
3
down vote
"In seek of" is not a common expression.
You could either say:
In search of an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb search and is a common expression.
or you can use
Seeking an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb seek as a gerund. Seek doesn't sound right with an indirect object, which is why in seek of sounds wrong to me, I think.
Also, you wouldn't use "searching an ideal start ... " but you could use
Searching for an ideal start for my career, ...
Seek sounds a little more formal to me than search, but it's probably personal preference. None of these choices is informal or slang; they will all suit for an application letter.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I am applying for the PhD program at your school, as I consider it the ideal qualification for my proposed career in rocket science.
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
"In seek of" is not a common expression.
You could either say:
In search of an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb search and is a common expression.
or you can use
Seeking an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb seek as a gerund. Seek doesn't sound right with an indirect object, which is why in seek of sounds wrong to me, I think.
Also, you wouldn't use "searching an ideal start ... " but you could use
Searching for an ideal start for my career, ...
Seek sounds a little more formal to me than search, but it's probably personal preference. None of these choices is informal or slang; they will all suit for an application letter.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
"In seek of" is not a common expression.
You could either say:
In search of an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb search and is a common expression.
or you can use
Seeking an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb seek as a gerund. Seek doesn't sound right with an indirect object, which is why in seek of sounds wrong to me, I think.
Also, you wouldn't use "searching an ideal start ... " but you could use
Searching for an ideal start for my career, ...
Seek sounds a little more formal to me than search, but it's probably personal preference. None of these choices is informal or slang; they will all suit for an application letter.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
"In seek of" is not a common expression.
You could either say:
In search of an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb search and is a common expression.
or you can use
Seeking an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb seek as a gerund. Seek doesn't sound right with an indirect object, which is why in seek of sounds wrong to me, I think.
Also, you wouldn't use "searching an ideal start ... " but you could use
Searching for an ideal start for my career, ...
Seek sounds a little more formal to me than search, but it's probably personal preference. None of these choices is informal or slang; they will all suit for an application letter.
"In seek of" is not a common expression.
You could either say:
In search of an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb search and is a common expression.
or you can use
Seeking an ideal start for my career, ...
This uses the verb seek as a gerund. Seek doesn't sound right with an indirect object, which is why in seek of sounds wrong to me, I think.
Also, you wouldn't use "searching an ideal start ... " but you could use
Searching for an ideal start for my career, ...
Seek sounds a little more formal to me than search, but it's probably personal preference. None of these choices is informal or slang; they will all suit for an application letter.
answered Nov 29 '15 at 21:58
Kit Z. Fox♦
23.3k1993179
23.3k1993179
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I am applying for the PhD program at your school, as I consider it the ideal qualification for my proposed career in rocket science.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I am applying for the PhD program at your school, as I consider it the ideal qualification for my proposed career in rocket science.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
I am applying for the PhD program at your school, as I consider it the ideal qualification for my proposed career in rocket science.
I am applying for the PhD program at your school, as I consider it the ideal qualification for my proposed career in rocket science.
answered Nov 29 '15 at 11:09
Cargill
1,76148
1,76148
add a comment |
add a comment |
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You might be looking for this expression It's important to get off on the right foot in this new job. So, you could write: “In order for my career to start off on the right foot, I am applying...”
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:33
If you dislike or feel uncomfortable with my edit you can rollback to the previous version, but if you do show some minimal research, users will be more inclined to answer. Good luck!
– Mari-Lou A
Nov 29 '15 at 10:49
Please do not edit the question to remove it altogether. If you are not happy with how the question is presented, feel free to improve it; but removing the essential parts of it completely just invalidates the answers you’ve received and makes it a non-question.
– Janus Bahs Jacquet
1 hour ago