“or” or “otherwise”, grammar and maing sentence question
I'd like to inform my customer that please confirm the box design soon because the goods are almost ready. If the customer replies slowly, we will have no box to pack the goods.
Please help me to check if the sentence is correct:
" Please inform us your decision for the box design soon—otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
or
"Please inform us your decision for the box design soon, or we can't pack when goods are ready."
grammar grammaticality
New contributor
add a comment |
I'd like to inform my customer that please confirm the box design soon because the goods are almost ready. If the customer replies slowly, we will have no box to pack the goods.
Please help me to check if the sentence is correct:
" Please inform us your decision for the box design soon—otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
or
"Please inform us your decision for the box design soon, or we can't pack when goods are ready."
grammar grammaticality
New contributor
1
You can't say "please inform us your decision", but you could say "please inform us about your decision". Other options would be: "Please inform us about your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready." or "Please let us know your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
– ralph.m
2 hours ago
@ralph.m Such nice answer! Considering posting this as answer?
– Omega Krypton
2 hours ago
Mavis, welcome to EL&U. Note, "or" and "otherwise" work similarly but the latter is a bit more emphatic. However, you may not receive a formal answer, as your question is somewhat trivial for the serious language enthusiasts this site exists for. You might find our sister site [ell] more suitable for questions like these. For further guidance, see How to Ask and take the Tour. :-)
– Chappo
3 mins ago
I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), as the meanings and usages of the two words are easy to find in a good dictionary.
– Chappo
1 min ago
add a comment |
I'd like to inform my customer that please confirm the box design soon because the goods are almost ready. If the customer replies slowly, we will have no box to pack the goods.
Please help me to check if the sentence is correct:
" Please inform us your decision for the box design soon—otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
or
"Please inform us your decision for the box design soon, or we can't pack when goods are ready."
grammar grammaticality
New contributor
I'd like to inform my customer that please confirm the box design soon because the goods are almost ready. If the customer replies slowly, we will have no box to pack the goods.
Please help me to check if the sentence is correct:
" Please inform us your decision for the box design soon—otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
or
"Please inform us your decision for the box design soon, or we can't pack when goods are ready."
grammar grammaticality
grammar grammaticality
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 3 hours ago
Mavis
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
1
You can't say "please inform us your decision", but you could say "please inform us about your decision". Other options would be: "Please inform us about your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready." or "Please let us know your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
– ralph.m
2 hours ago
@ralph.m Such nice answer! Considering posting this as answer?
– Omega Krypton
2 hours ago
Mavis, welcome to EL&U. Note, "or" and "otherwise" work similarly but the latter is a bit more emphatic. However, you may not receive a formal answer, as your question is somewhat trivial for the serious language enthusiasts this site exists for. You might find our sister site [ell] more suitable for questions like these. For further guidance, see How to Ask and take the Tour. :-)
– Chappo
3 mins ago
I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), as the meanings and usages of the two words are easy to find in a good dictionary.
– Chappo
1 min ago
add a comment |
1
You can't say "please inform us your decision", but you could say "please inform us about your decision". Other options would be: "Please inform us about your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready." or "Please let us know your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
– ralph.m
2 hours ago
@ralph.m Such nice answer! Considering posting this as answer?
– Omega Krypton
2 hours ago
Mavis, welcome to EL&U. Note, "or" and "otherwise" work similarly but the latter is a bit more emphatic. However, you may not receive a formal answer, as your question is somewhat trivial for the serious language enthusiasts this site exists for. You might find our sister site [ell] more suitable for questions like these. For further guidance, see How to Ask and take the Tour. :-)
– Chappo
3 mins ago
I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), as the meanings and usages of the two words are easy to find in a good dictionary.
– Chappo
1 min ago
1
1
You can't say "please inform us your decision", but you could say "please inform us about your decision". Other options would be: "Please inform us about your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready." or "Please let us know your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
– ralph.m
2 hours ago
You can't say "please inform us your decision", but you could say "please inform us about your decision". Other options would be: "Please inform us about your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready." or "Please let us know your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
– ralph.m
2 hours ago
@ralph.m Such nice answer! Considering posting this as answer?
– Omega Krypton
2 hours ago
@ralph.m Such nice answer! Considering posting this as answer?
– Omega Krypton
2 hours ago
Mavis, welcome to EL&U. Note, "or" and "otherwise" work similarly but the latter is a bit more emphatic. However, you may not receive a formal answer, as your question is somewhat trivial for the serious language enthusiasts this site exists for. You might find our sister site [ell] more suitable for questions like these. For further guidance, see How to Ask and take the Tour. :-)
– Chappo
3 mins ago
Mavis, welcome to EL&U. Note, "or" and "otherwise" work similarly but the latter is a bit more emphatic. However, you may not receive a formal answer, as your question is somewhat trivial for the serious language enthusiasts this site exists for. You might find our sister site [ell] more suitable for questions like these. For further guidance, see How to Ask and take the Tour. :-)
– Chappo
3 mins ago
I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), as the meanings and usages of the two words are easy to find in a good dictionary.
– Chappo
1 min ago
I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), as the meanings and usages of the two words are easy to find in a good dictionary.
– Chappo
1 min ago
add a comment |
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1
You can't say "please inform us your decision", but you could say "please inform us about your decision". Other options would be: "Please inform us about your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready." or "Please let us know your decision regarding the box design soon. Otherwise we will have no boxes to pack when goods are ready."
– ralph.m
2 hours ago
@ralph.m Such nice answer! Considering posting this as answer?
– Omega Krypton
2 hours ago
Mavis, welcome to EL&U. Note, "or" and "otherwise" work similarly but the latter is a bit more emphatic. However, you may not receive a formal answer, as your question is somewhat trivial for the serious language enthusiasts this site exists for. You might find our sister site [ell] more suitable for questions like these. For further guidance, see How to Ask and take the Tour. :-)
– Chappo
3 mins ago
I'm flagging this as off-topic ("no research/ELL"), as the meanings and usages of the two words are easy to find in a good dictionary.
– Chappo
1 min ago