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Dear Sir I Want To Take Print Out From A Pdf File And The Pdf Contains Only Two Pages. Its An

Is "Please find the attachment of..." appropriate for a student to write in an email to a tutor?

It is not impolite. But, to make it more professional and respectful, you can do the following:It is very good that you say “please.”Be specific and clear about why you are sending the item and what response you hope for. If the item is an assignment, or something your tutor agreed to review, you can say, “As you requested,”Be specific about what is attached.Be specific about the action you hope he will take, and what he will return to you.Be specific about the date he will reply or the date you will be in touch or send the next item.For example:Dear [name of tutor],The draft of my paper you requested is attached. Please review it before we meet on Skype next Tuesday at 8pm.Then make sure that the file name of the paper includes your name, as well as the title.

Is it correct to write, “Please find attached the following reports”?

I would sooner say “I have attached the following reports:” or “Attached, you will find the following reports:”. Neither is impolite, even without the please. To make your sentence technically correct— “Please find, attached, the following reports:” Notice the colon in all three instances.

Which is correct: please find the attached file or please find the information?

Although “Please find attached file / attachment” (in short, ‘PFA’) is pretty commonplace, I am personally against this usage. You normally ask someone to “find” something which is not readily available. e.g. find a key or wallet that was misplaced / find a place to sit (in a restaurant or park etc.) / find solution to a problem and so on. When you are referring to a file that you have attached (to an e-mail), the attachment is readily available to the recipient - no need of “finding” it. “Please refer the attachment / attached file” should be enough.

Can someone please copy and paste "I'm sorry, " 1000 times?

I need it to send to a friend and I can't type it that many times on an iPod. So, just typed like this "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry" etc.

“As per your request I have attached the details for your consideration”, is it correct grammar?

Yes. Although, it will sound very formal when spoken, you may be able to pull it off if it were written.Spoken wise, you can simplify the sentence just as normal humans do yet keep it formal. Some examples:‘As requested, I have attached the details for your consideration.’‘I have attached the requested details for your consideration.’‘Attached are the details that you have requested for consideration.’‘The documents are attached as requested.’

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