[General] You might send me messages and I'll reply to you as soon as possible

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Silverobama

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Hi teachers.

A friend online asked me if I had some time to chat with her in English. At that time I was having lunch and later I would teach my students online. I didn't want to offend her so I said "You might send me messages and I'll reply to you as soon as possible". I wanted to tell her that "Now I don't have time but you can send me messages and when I'm free I'll reply to you soon".

I wonder if my italic sentence is natural.
 
I'd say "You can send me messages and I'll reply as soon as I'm free."
 
I'd say "You can send me messages and I'll reply as soon as I'm free."

Hi teachers. I still have two questions about this sentence. I wonder which one is better "You can send me a message" or "You can send me messages". I think I'd say "messages" because "a message" sounds like my friend is going to send me one message but obviously I hope my friend can send me messages as she wants. Also, will it be better to say "You can leave me messages......"
 
This would also work:

You could send me a message. I'll reply when I have time.
 
I wonder which one is better "You can send me a message" or "You can send me messages". I think I'd say "messages" because "a message" sounds like my friend is going to send me one message but obviously I hope my friend can send me messages as she wants. Also, [STRIKE]will[/STRIKE] would it be better to say "You can leave me messages......"
As you noted (and I emphasized above), the indefinite article clearly asks your friend to send you a single message. That's not what you want.

You'd say "You can leave me messages" if you wanted your friend to leave you voice mail, not texts.
 
As you noted (and I emphasized above), the indefinite article clearly asks your friend to send you a single message. That's not what you want.

You'd say "You can leave me messages" if you wanted your friend to leave you voice mail, not texts.

I see. It's very helpful. So, if I say "You can send me messages" this means "You can send a couple of text messages", right?
 
[STRIKE]It's[/STRIKE] That's very helpful. So, if I say "You can send me messages" this means "You can send a couple of text messages", right?
Not exactly. "A couple of" means "about two". "Messages" could mean a couple of messages; it could mean a billion messages. All it says is more than one message.
 
Please correct me if I'm wrong.

If I want my friend to send me more than one message, I'd use Rover's version. If I want her to send me just one, I'd use Ems' version. And if I want her to leave me voice message, I'd say "You can leave me a message/leave me messages".

Am I right?
 
Please correct me if I'm wrong.

If I want my friend to send me more than one message, I'd use Rover's version. If I want her to send me just one, I'd use Ems' version. And if I want her to leave me voice message, I'd say "You can leave me a message/leave me messages".

Am I right?
Yes.
 
I'd probably say "You can/could send me a message" even if I expected more than one message to come through. If I definitely expected more than one, I might say "You could message/text/email me".

I wouldn't use "You could send me messages".
 
I'd say message, singular: Send me a message. I'll answer it later.


PS - I can't open my Notifications tab, so I'm answering here: I'm well. I don't need a face mask. Thanks!
 
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