Possibly none. Are there multiple reports that make up SPD12C-04?
Although "on Nov. 28" would read more naturally as "for Nov. 28."
Dear All
How many errors does this letter contain?
Dear Ladies and Gentlemen,
Attached please find SPD12C-04, Daily Reports for Rig Rajaei on Nov. 28, 2012.
Rgds,
Rig Rajaei
PPl Drilling Supervisor
Possibly none. Are there multiple reports that make up SPD12C-04?
Although "on Nov. 28" would read more naturally as "for Nov. 28."
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.
If it's just one day then it would be a daily report, not daily reports.
You should type out the entire word "Regards."
I was just doing this with one of my students, and only two possibilities would be acceptable in an exam:Dear Ladies and Gentlemen,
Dear Sirs, <----don't forget the comma
or, better:
Dear Sir and Madam,
I would say, please find attached....a daily report for...for November, 28th.Attached please find SPD12C-04, Daily Reports for Rig Rajaei on Nov. 28, 2012.
If this is a formal letter: Yours sincerely...regards I suppose is acceptable if you know this person.Rgds,
:)
Barb: would the "th" at the end of 28th not be mandatory? Thanks :)
Context is important. Please provide enough for us to be able to deal effectively with your question.
Your thread title should include all or part of the word/phrase being discussed.
If you just want to know the meaning of a word, try OneLook Dictionary Search first.
Dear Sirs, -- only if you know there are multiple male recipients.
Dear Sir and Madam, -- only if you know there are two recipients, one male and one female.
Something as routine as a cover letter or cover e-mail that has the sole purpose of saying "Here's the report" doesn't need to be that formal.
You can skip the salutation entirey.
Atttached is the daily report(s) for November 28, 2012, for the XYZ rig.
Please let me know if you have any questions.
(There may be mulitple reports - maintenance log, periodic air quality measurements, production volume by hour, whatever. I don't know if it's "report" or "reports.")
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.
Can I use "The daily report(s) is attached for November 28, 2012, for the XYZ rig."?Atttached is the daily report(s) for November 28, 2012, for the XYZ rig.
What is the purpose of inversion here?
Thank you.
Remember - correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing make posts much easier to read.
Thanks,What inversion are you referring to? Simply swapping over the two halves of the sentence? It doesn't really serve a purpose as far as I'm concerned, it's just another way of saying it.
If you're going to use "reports", you must use "are", not "is".
I mean inversion here:
Atttached is the daily report for November 28, 2012, for the XYZ rig.
Why "attached" verb is put at the beginning of the sentence?
I think the ordinary order is as follows:
The daily report is attached for November 28, 2012, for the XYZ rig.
SPD12C-04 is name of the oil platform and there are multiple reports for each day.
Thanks