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hereby    音标拼音: [hɪrb'ɑɪ]
ad. 以此,特此

以此,特此

hereby
adv 1: (formal) by means of this; "I hereby declare you man and
wife" [synonym: {hereby}, {herewith}]



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  • word usage - Correct use of hereby on a formal letter - English . . .
    hereby Adverb by this means Examples of hereby in a Sentence: I hereby declare the Olympic Games officially open The sum will hereby be charged to your account The parties to the lawsuit hereby agree to settle the matter out of court The graph shows that now this phrase is correct and appropriate, though it sounds rather formal
  • Correct use of hereby - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Hereby: As a result of this document or utterance: If you want to use hereby, the sentence might be: The total amount specified in "Appendix 3 Price Breakdown and Payment Plan" is hereby attached to the Subcontract This sentence now means, 'As a result of some discussion prior to this sentence being committed to paper (assumably immediately before this sentence or at least referenced
  • how to use be and is are hereby? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    0 Please help me to explain the grammar of this sentence belows: any Director or any person (s) authorized by the Directors be and is are hereby authorized, either solely or jointly, to sign and execute the Document I don't undersand how to use "be" after directors " authorized by the Directors be and is are hereby authorized" Please help me
  • Is the use of hereby superfluous? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Is the use of "hereby" ever essential? I get the feeling it is always superfluous "As a result of this document or utterance" seems to be trivially true For example: I hereby declare that wh
  • adverbs - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Anglo-Norman, Old English, Middle English words Alien, chose in action, demurrer, estoppel, Esquire, fee simple fee tail, laches; metes and bounds, Oyez, quash, rol, voir dire, Aforesaid and forthwith, herewords: herein, hereby, hereafter…, Let (without let or hindrance), said and such (adjectives), Thence and thenceforth, there-words
  • Is it correct to say I kindly request you to. . . ?
    It seems like everyone is hung up on whether "request you to" is correct grammar Nobody has answered the kernel of the question which, I think, is whether kindness is implied in any request I don't think it is A request is not implicitly kind or unkind So "kindly" adds just as much to the sentence as "humbly "
  • Word that means you have read, understand, and agree to a document . . .
    If it is really important that the exact meaning is conveyed, don't try to be original Just say what you mean exactly Not that you correctly use reviewed and read, but someone must also have understood it (not understand) and they agree with it, or they have agreed
  • grammar - Is this sentence correct? I hereby declare my parental . . .
    Is this sentence correct? I hereby declare my parental consent for the planned marriage [closed] Ask Question Asked 7 years, 5 months ago Modified 7 years, 5 months ago
  • Meaning of confer upon - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The only objects which can constitute [the space-time framework essential to interpersonal communication] are those which confer upon it their own fundamental characteristics
  • word choice - Henceforth vs. hereinafter - English Language Usage . . .
    What is the most suitable way to express that a sentence word will be "replaced by" another sentence word, from that point (in a text, for instance)? Henceforth called named Hereinafter c





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