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Which is correct kindly request or kindly provide?

Which is correct kindly request or kindly provide?

“Kindly provide us with the documents” (without the requesting bit), on the other hand, is perfectly idiomatic to me. – Janus Bahs Jacquet Aug 12 ’13 at 11:16 “You are requested to kindly provide …” contains a split infinitive. It is not incorrect, but some would prefer “you are kindly requested to provide…” on that ground.

Which is better kindly or provide with US?

I would request that you kindly reply to this post only if you are sure of the answer by experience or qualification. You’re right that “provide with us” makes no sense. Regarding the other, it doesn’t much matter, and I don’t know that anyone would notice which place you put the kindly. – tchrist ♦ Jul 3 ’13 at 3:45

When to use’please kindly let me know’and’kindly’?

And use of kindly should be needed only when it’s an exceptional idea that you should be notified separately. If you need such exception, use “please let me know also”. And most of all, i wish people wouldn’t use “please” or “kindly” when it’s related to a question and it’s obvious those asked might have an answer.

Is the word kindly in the right place?

You are kindly requested … As you correctly say, this is intended to be polite, but the kindly is in the wrong place. You are requested to kindly provide us … This has kindly in an appropriate place, as @AndrewLeach has indicated in his comment. Personally, I suspect that this question touches as much on cultural issues as on language issues.

What’s the meaning of the phrase’kind enough’?

In your case, “kind enough” conveys the positive notion of Joe doing something out of his kindness. It doesn’t ordinarily reflect badly on Joe, unless the context warrants it.

And use of kindly should be needed only when it’s an exceptional idea that you should be notified separately. If you need such exception, use “please let me know also”. And most of all, i wish people wouldn’t use “please” or “kindly” when it’s related to a question and it’s obvious those asked might have an answer.

Which is the correct way to use kindly?

Kindly keep the distance from the grass. ( Emphatic ) ‘Kindly” an adverb to be used in Formal English. Kindly look into the matter at the earliest. Kindly permit to offer my suggestions. Would you kindly explain what you mean by that?