Is this correct:
Sentence: We are making some assumptions and considerations.
Best regards
Is this correct:
Sentence: We are making some assumptions and considerations.
Best regards
Thanks Canadian45, for your time!
Then, is this correct:
We are making some assumptions and having some considerations.
Best regards
That’s not well worded.
Possibly:
We are making some assumptions and giving it(?) our consideration,
though I wouldn’t rule out the first sentence quite as quickly as Canadian did. It really depends on the greater context.
Thanks for your help, Beeesneees!
This is the original sentence:
ABC Corporation have developed this proposal after a preliminary analysis and making some assumptions and considerations.
Best regards
Beeesneees,
I’m not sure you need ‘considerations’ there. Depending on what they were, the uncountable ‘consideration’ might be better:
ABC Corporation have developed this proposal after a preliminary analysis and after some consideration(s) which was/were supported by a number of assumptions.
In your latest round of sentences:
We are making some assumptions and drawing conclusions.
We are taking some assumptions into consideration.
[color=blue]But in North America we don’t say ‘making considerations’. ‘undertaking considerations’ is one way of expressing that.
but can we use this ‘We are making some assumptions and considerations’ in spoken english ?
[color=blue]no
The fact that one is speaking is not a license to use incorrect English.
Thanks Canadian45 and Beeesneees for your elaborate reply and time!
Best regards
thank you madam!
madam beeesneees can you please suggest some exercise to bring some fluency in my english, because when i speak english i normaly use very limited words so my english does not look strong and attractive while i speak it.
Welcome, Chauhan!
See the important changes made in your post. You need to mind your ‘capitals’, too.
Madam Beeesneees, can you please suggest some exercise to bring some fluency in my English, because when I speak English I normally use very limited words, so my English does not look strong and attractive while I speak it.
(As a matter of fact, I would say, your written English is good)
Although the point about correct use of capital letters is important, those ‘important changes’ are incomplete.
'in my English ’ is incorrect there. It should be ‘to my English’.
‘some exercise’ as used in that way is Indian English. A native English speaker would say ‘an exercise’ or ‘some exercises’.
This sentence is quite odd:
my English does not look strong and attractive while I speak it.
I suggest
and as a result my English does not appear to be fluent and polished.
Harsh, just keep on trying. Don’t give up. You’ll get there.
Hi , Thanks Anglophile, to be true i really dont know where to use ‘comma’ and ‘dot’ , i use them sometimes corretly because i have read so much English in the recent time, but i dont use them properly.And yes one more thing sometimes my messages appear twice because i have network problems ok. And thanx for appriciating my written English.
cheerio,Harsh
Thank you so much Madam Beeesneees, and yes i would definitely work harder to bring fluency to my English . And as we all know “SUCCESS IS MORE TRY THAN CRY”.
And do you know after two days from now my final exams are starting and the first paper is English.
The pronoun ‘I’ is always written as a capital letter, regardless of its position in a sentence.
A spell checker would help you avoid some of your errors.
‘thanks’, not ‘thanx’.
Sorry next time it will not happen madam and thank you!