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  1. "received by" or "received from" ? | WordReference Forums

    Apr 20, 2009 · What is the correct (or the best) way? 1) Documents received by the customer 2) Documents received from the customer many thanks in advance, md

  2. "Have you received it?" vs "Did you receive it?"

    Apr 1, 2011 · Hey guys, If I fax a document to my friend, should I ask him 1) Have you received it? or, 2) Did you receive it? Thanks in advance. Please help!

  3. you will receive / you will be received - WordReference Forums

    Feb 2, 2013 · In context of registration steps: -After you have registered, you will receive an on-screen confirmation and a link to where you can login. I wonder here why it's not "you will be …

  4. receive of/from - WordReference Forums

    Aug 2, 2009 · If I want to say: I received the letter of Bill from Tom. I received Bill's letter from Tom. how would I differenciate "of" and "from"? should I use "de" for "of" and "a" for from? Or …

  5. receive - passive voice - WordReference Forums

    Dec 14, 2011 · The passive voice form of "will receive" is "will be received", exactly as you wrote. If your teacher is claiming that "receive" becomes "send" in the passive voice (which is what …

  6. you will have received /will receive [future perfect vs simple future]

    Aug 4, 2016 · You should receive the samples latest by tomorrow morning. Let's meet on Wednesday, 9am sharp to discuss the results. I'm sure you will have received the samples …

  7. I don't receive /I didn't receive - WordReference Forums

    May 1, 2017 · Are you sure that you sent me the letter? I don't receive it. I didn't receive it. May I know are both of the replies in different tenses correct? Past or present tense?

  8. I haven't received / receive your letter yet. - WordReference Forums

    May 7, 2012 · Hi,all I'd like to know something about the following sentence. "I haven't received / receive your letter yet." I've already consulted a dictionary to find "I haven't received your letter …

  9. I'm yet to vs I've yet to | WordReference Forums

    Mar 31, 2015 · I hear mant times that there's nothing like "I'm yet to" in the English language and any use would be incorrect. But I am not sure what should I do? Should I use it or not? Is there …

  10. As soon as it is been received vs. it's received. - WordReference …

    Jan 26, 2012 · Yes I agree. "As soon as we receive payment" or "as soon as payment is received" are the most common ways to phrase this but this is merely the custom and practice adopted …