Hi everyone
I really don't know exactly what "going forward" means.
Kindly help me to explain that (Am I better when using kindly instead of Please for more polite)
Thank you
Welcome to the forum, Jimmy.
'going forward' can convery several ideas. Can you give us a sentence in which you do not understand the meaning of the words?
'Please' is the appropriate word to use in a polite request; 'kindly' is not
Context is always important; labelling is rarely important.
Really thanks for your reply
1. For your information, I face that when we discuss in work, and a colleague told us that something "going forward" (sorry I did not exactly what she wrote)
2. Please show me some examples/situations that we use "going forward"
3. About using please, I heard that word sounds heavy, please show me which cases we use "kindly"
'Please' is perfect; there's nothing heavy about it. If anything 'kindly' is the 'heavier' word.
Not everybody agrees with 5jj about kindly. I use it myself sometimes as an alternative to please.
Click here to read more about the word and find examples of its many uses.
Rover
Last edited by Rover_KE; 05-Feb-2012 at 08:45.
My personal feeling about the use of the word is summed up in this Macmillan note:
Formal - used for asking someone to do something, especially when you are trying to hide the fact that you are annoyed.
kindly - definition. American English definition of kindly by Macmillan Dictionary
Context is always important; labelling is rarely important.
Thanks Rover, 5jj for this dicussion
From both I think that I should not use "kindly frequently as I did.
And what about "going forward", pla help to show me how to use it. I made me so crazy when I could not find anything about it in Longman dictionary.
Much appreciate your ideas.
'Going forward' usually means 'making progress.'
It can also mean starting immediately and in the future.
Going forward, we'll have a meeting with the entire project team every Wednesday morning and every Friday afternoon.
Going forward, please check with me before making any purchases over $200
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
It's also a notorious buzz-phrase that our PM has been panned for.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/opinion/a-never-ending-linguistic-turn-for-the-worse/story-e6frg6zo-1225889983781
"I once had a sub-editor who warned me that if I used “going forward” or “moving forward” in a quote, or, even worse, my own copy, I would be shot and buried at the bottom of the The Age’s Spencer Street building"
Last edited by Raymott; 06-Feb-2012 at 14:10.
It's horrid. I first heard it used by Carly Fiorina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. (The fact that she was CEO when I was kicked out of HP may have affected my feelings about her.
)
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