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'Kindly make sure to let's know'



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)The use of “therefor” in my High School Diploma“Would” vs. “Will”Work around an issue or workaround an issue?Let's suppose vs. Let us supposeIs this correct "I'll be looking forward to helping.. ? Read on pleaseCustomer Technical Support or Technical Customer Support?“Make sure it work” or “make sure it works”?“The Germans were attacking, and the French”. Why is it wrong?Had come to know? Is that correct grammar/English?Usage of prepositions “on” and “of” for dates



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








2















I received an email from my team lead, which says:




Kindly make sure to let's know the challenges you faced while working on the project.




It was the reply to my email which presented challenges.
I think the above reply from my team lead doesn't sound correct (I may be incorrect).
I would like to rephrase it:




Kindly make sure to let us know if you face any challenges.




Am I correct about the contraction here? And is the rest correct?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    You are correct. Not sure the name of the rule or convention, but contractions in such cases are, if not discouraged outright, highly irregular.

    – Carly
    2 hours ago











  • In this case "let's" is a contraction for "lettuce".

    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago











  • @NigelJ What is wrong with ..."Let's go" ? Common expression and used by perfectly mature adults...

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @Cascabel Let's agree on that.

    – Nigel J
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Let’s fret over this no longer.

    – IconDaemon
    1 hour ago

















2















I received an email from my team lead, which says:




Kindly make sure to let's know the challenges you faced while working on the project.




It was the reply to my email which presented challenges.
I think the above reply from my team lead doesn't sound correct (I may be incorrect).
I would like to rephrase it:




Kindly make sure to let us know if you face any challenges.




Am I correct about the contraction here? And is the rest correct?










share|improve this question



















  • 1





    You are correct. Not sure the name of the rule or convention, but contractions in such cases are, if not discouraged outright, highly irregular.

    – Carly
    2 hours ago











  • In this case "let's" is a contraction for "lettuce".

    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago











  • @NigelJ What is wrong with ..."Let's go" ? Common expression and used by perfectly mature adults...

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @Cascabel Let's agree on that.

    – Nigel J
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Let’s fret over this no longer.

    – IconDaemon
    1 hour ago













2












2








2








I received an email from my team lead, which says:




Kindly make sure to let's know the challenges you faced while working on the project.




It was the reply to my email which presented challenges.
I think the above reply from my team lead doesn't sound correct (I may be incorrect).
I would like to rephrase it:




Kindly make sure to let us know if you face any challenges.




Am I correct about the contraction here? And is the rest correct?










share|improve this question
















I received an email from my team lead, which says:




Kindly make sure to let's know the challenges you faced while working on the project.




It was the reply to my email which presented challenges.
I think the above reply from my team lead doesn't sound correct (I may be incorrect).
I would like to rephrase it:




Kindly make sure to let us know if you face any challenges.




Am I correct about the contraction here? And is the rest correct?







grammar grammar-checker






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago









Araucaria

35.8k1071151




35.8k1071151










asked 3 hours ago









Vinayak KaleVinayak Kale

243




243







  • 1





    You are correct. Not sure the name of the rule or convention, but contractions in such cases are, if not discouraged outright, highly irregular.

    – Carly
    2 hours ago











  • In this case "let's" is a contraction for "lettuce".

    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago











  • @NigelJ What is wrong with ..."Let's go" ? Common expression and used by perfectly mature adults...

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @Cascabel Let's agree on that.

    – Nigel J
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Let’s fret over this no longer.

    – IconDaemon
    1 hour ago












  • 1





    You are correct. Not sure the name of the rule or convention, but contractions in such cases are, if not discouraged outright, highly irregular.

    – Carly
    2 hours ago











  • In this case "let's" is a contraction for "lettuce".

    – Hot Licks
    2 hours ago











  • @NigelJ What is wrong with ..."Let's go" ? Common expression and used by perfectly mature adults...

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @Cascabel Let's agree on that.

    – Nigel J
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    Let’s fret over this no longer.

    – IconDaemon
    1 hour ago







1




1





You are correct. Not sure the name of the rule or convention, but contractions in such cases are, if not discouraged outright, highly irregular.

– Carly
2 hours ago





You are correct. Not sure the name of the rule or convention, but contractions in such cases are, if not discouraged outright, highly irregular.

– Carly
2 hours ago













In this case "let's" is a contraction for "lettuce".

– Hot Licks
2 hours ago





In this case "let's" is a contraction for "lettuce".

– Hot Licks
2 hours ago













@NigelJ What is wrong with ..."Let's go" ? Common expression and used by perfectly mature adults...

– Cascabel
1 hour ago





@NigelJ What is wrong with ..."Let's go" ? Common expression and used by perfectly mature adults...

– Cascabel
1 hour ago




1




1





@Cascabel Let's agree on that.

– Nigel J
1 hour ago





@Cascabel Let's agree on that.

– Nigel J
1 hour ago




1




1





Let’s fret over this no longer.

– IconDaemon
1 hour ago





Let’s fret over this no longer.

– IconDaemon
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














While "let's" is derived from contracting "let us", it is now a fixed term with a specific meaning. It would be slightly odd to write "let us" to mean "we should" (it's a bit overly formal), and it's very odd to write "let's" to mean "let us".



To be idiomatic, a contraction has be one that is standard, and being a standard contraction is a property of not only the words being contracted, but the meaning those words are being used in. So, for instance, if we use the word "will" in the sense of "last testament", it would not be idiomatic to say "Is the won't here?" to mean "Is the will not here?"






share|improve this answer

























  • Sorry, but I provided a little formatting to improve readability...hope you don't mind.

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago












Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














While "let's" is derived from contracting "let us", it is now a fixed term with a specific meaning. It would be slightly odd to write "let us" to mean "we should" (it's a bit overly formal), and it's very odd to write "let's" to mean "let us".



To be idiomatic, a contraction has be one that is standard, and being a standard contraction is a property of not only the words being contracted, but the meaning those words are being used in. So, for instance, if we use the word "will" in the sense of "last testament", it would not be idiomatic to say "Is the won't here?" to mean "Is the will not here?"






share|improve this answer

























  • Sorry, but I provided a little formatting to improve readability...hope you don't mind.

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago
















3














While "let's" is derived from contracting "let us", it is now a fixed term with a specific meaning. It would be slightly odd to write "let us" to mean "we should" (it's a bit overly formal), and it's very odd to write "let's" to mean "let us".



To be idiomatic, a contraction has be one that is standard, and being a standard contraction is a property of not only the words being contracted, but the meaning those words are being used in. So, for instance, if we use the word "will" in the sense of "last testament", it would not be idiomatic to say "Is the won't here?" to mean "Is the will not here?"






share|improve this answer

























  • Sorry, but I provided a little formatting to improve readability...hope you don't mind.

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago














3












3








3







While "let's" is derived from contracting "let us", it is now a fixed term with a specific meaning. It would be slightly odd to write "let us" to mean "we should" (it's a bit overly formal), and it's very odd to write "let's" to mean "let us".



To be idiomatic, a contraction has be one that is standard, and being a standard contraction is a property of not only the words being contracted, but the meaning those words are being used in. So, for instance, if we use the word "will" in the sense of "last testament", it would not be idiomatic to say "Is the won't here?" to mean "Is the will not here?"






share|improve this answer















While "let's" is derived from contracting "let us", it is now a fixed term with a specific meaning. It would be slightly odd to write "let us" to mean "we should" (it's a bit overly formal), and it's very odd to write "let's" to mean "let us".



To be idiomatic, a contraction has be one that is standard, and being a standard contraction is a property of not only the words being contracted, but the meaning those words are being used in. So, for instance, if we use the word "will" in the sense of "last testament", it would not be idiomatic to say "Is the won't here?" to mean "Is the will not here?"







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago









Cascabel

8,14762856




8,14762856










answered 2 hours ago









AcccumulationAcccumulation

1,57329




1,57329












  • Sorry, but I provided a little formatting to improve readability...hope you don't mind.

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago


















  • Sorry, but I provided a little formatting to improve readability...hope you don't mind.

    – Cascabel
    1 hour ago

















Sorry, but I provided a little formatting to improve readability...hope you don't mind.

– Cascabel
1 hour ago






Sorry, but I provided a little formatting to improve readability...hope you don't mind.

– Cascabel
1 hour ago


















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