Which is the most popular thanks for your recommendation?

Which is the most popular thanks for your recommendation?

Thanks for your recommendation is the most popular phrase on the web. More popular! Listen, by the way, I need to say, thank you so much for your recommendation to the Lachman brothers.

What’s the difference between OK, thanks, and thanks?

OK, thanks is a comma splice and is the typical form. I would say that the reason it is used over OK; thanks is simply convention. Semicolons are rarely seen in English writing, news articles or conversational writing such as emails. I only ever really use semicolons to separate email addresses.

Do you use a comma in OK, thanks?

No, “OK, thanks” is not a comma splice. A comma splice is using a comma to join two independent clauses, and neither “OK” nor “thanks” is an independent clause—they are both exclamations—so there’s nothing wrong with using a comma.

How to thank Mr Hoppenstedt for his recommendation?

Some things have been added to the text thanks to the recommendation by Mr Hoppenstedt. Thanks to Elizabeth’s recommendation, William hired me as your replacement. Thank you for the recommendation. Well, thank you for the recommendation. And thank you for the Thai food recommendation. David got into Stanford, so thanks for the recommendation.

Thanks for your recommendation is the most popular phrase on the web. More popular! Listen, by the way, I need to say, thank you so much for your recommendation to the Lachman brothers.

OK, thanks is a comma splice and is the typical form. I would say that the reason it is used over OK; thanks is simply convention. Semicolons are rarely seen in English writing, news articles or conversational writing such as emails. I only ever really use semicolons to separate email addresses.

No, “OK, thanks” is not a comma splice. A comma splice is using a comma to join two independent clauses, and neither “OK” nor “thanks” is an independent clause—they are both exclamations—so there’s nothing wrong with using a comma.

Which is correct Best Regards or thank you?

Both are grammatically correct but there is a difference in tone. The phrase ‘best regards’ is written at the end of typically a business letter or email. Best regards are not said to friends or family–too formal.