When you get great advice, you may show your appreciation with these phrases:
- I appreciate you taking the time to speak with me.
- Thanks for the helpful advice!
- Thank you for sharing your advice with me.
- Thanks for agreeing to give me some advice.
- Thank you for offering your valuable advice.
How can I be grateful to someone?
Here are ten ways to become a more thankful person.
- Every day, say aloud three good things that happened.
- Keep a gratitude journal.
- Say thanks to your partner.
- Cool a hot temper with a quick gratitude inventory.
- Thank yourself.
- Use technology to send three gratitude messages a week.
- Savor the good moments.
How to use grateful for your advice in English?
“I would be gratefulfor youradvice as to whether this omission was deliberate, or whether it was simply an oversight,” Feeney said in the letter to the minister. I am personally gratefulfor youradvice, counsel and friendship. Thanks again foryouradvice. I am grateful, very grateful, for your friendship”. So thankful & gratefulfor your support.
Which is correct please advise or Please Advise?
Advice is a noun, meaning “suggestions for what to do,” and advise is a verb meaning “to give advice.” Mix up your s and your c and you’ll need advice on your spelling, as well as on the question you’re actually asking. In the end, there’s nothing grammatically wrong with “please advise.”
When to use ” Please Advise ” and ” thank you “?
You’ve “advised.”. At the most basic level, “please advise” is a request for advice or answers. But to some people, it can come across as redundant, stuffy, or passive aggressive.
Is it rude to say ” please advise ” in an email?
In most cases, the phrase comes after a question, so it ends up functioning as filler words or worse, as in Eric’s email. In the second example email above, the “please advise” doesn’t necessarily come across as rude, but it’s also not strictly necessary.