Do you say thanks for letting me know?

If someone gives you a bit of useful information, it is good to thank them. Well, thanks for letting me know so I have time to make other plans. Thanks for letting me know you had this on your blog.

Is it rude to say ” thanks for asking “?

In oral conversations most of the politeness lays in the contexts. If you wanted to answer more formally you should have used something like Thank you for being concerned, It is really very nice of you to ask me.

When to say thank you, but don’t say anything?

In times of suffering, we don’t need to hear words to ease the pain as much as we need someone to share our pain. When you don’t know what to say, just say “Thank You” and be there. 4. Say “Thank You” when you’re receiving helpful feedback. Feedback can be very helpful, but we rarely see it that way.

When do you say thanks for your help?

Or a simple, ironic, thanks for your help to someone who has not helped etc. – terdon Aug 20 ’13 at 12:45 As others have said, when spoken sincerely it’s a perfectly fine thing to say.

Which is correct thanks for Let me know or thanks for letting me know?

While chatting on any social media, you may noticed internet slang word like TFLMK. What does TFLMK mean? Thanks for letting me know is a perfect sentence to use in conversation, or thanks to let me know is correct to say. “Know” in that sentence should be an infinitive (without ‘to’) and not conjugated.

In oral conversations most of the politeness lays in the contexts. If you wanted to answer more formally you should have used something like Thank you for being concerned, It is really very nice of you to ask me.

Is it okay to reply ” will do.thanks “?

Throw in a, “ I’ll take care of it.” Or anything that expresses that you understand the task at hand. If he didn’t think you were capable he wouldn’t ask you to do it. What’s a great crowdfunding investment opportunity? Monogram is disrupting the $19.6 billion joint replacement market. Join Series B round for just $250.79.

In times of suffering, we don’t need to hear words to ease the pain as much as we need someone to share our pain. When you don’t know what to say, just say “Thank You” and be there. 4. Say “Thank You” when you’re receiving helpful feedback. Feedback can be very helpful, but we rarely see it that way.