![]() |
I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? Hi, I helped my customer and after I resolved the issue. He said, thank you for your help! If I say "I'm glad that we could get this sorted out for you", is that gramatically wrong? I hope to hearing from you all soon...:) |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? It's fine! Why did you think it might be wrong? |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? AOK...totally fine. I'm with Sue...why did you think it might be wrong? Sometimes I worry that I say things incorrectly when they are correct (in Spanish). |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? Can someone explain why that phrase is correct? What are the other statements similar to that? I was told I should have said "Thank you, I'm glad I've resolved this for you" or "I was able to help you". thank you English-coach and susan53... |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? I think the issue might be that you are using a phrasal verb...sort out. It is much more natural to use phrasal verbs from a native speakers point of view but maybe the person who told you to say "resolved" doesn't think phrasal verbs are appropriate in this instance. Sometimes phrsal verbs sound less formal. Other statements similar to yours: Thank you, I'm glad I could help fix this issue. Thank you, I'm glad I could be of assistance. Thank you, I'm glad I could help. Thank you, I'm glad we could resolve this issue for you. Thank you, I'm glad we sorted that out. I think there aren't that many other ways to put it. :) Cheers, Diana |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? Thank you very much Diana. I'm now confident to use that kind of response. :) |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? You are welcome! I'm glad I could be of help. :) |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? Quote:
However, it sounds like from the answers you were told were correct, you (or the speaker) were the one sorting out the problem. However, the original structure seems to imply that someone else was doing 'the sorting'. 'get this sorted' matches the structure 'get my hair cut' or 'have my house painted'. 'get something done' or 'have something done' - someone else is doing it for the speaker. The speaker isn't doing it. If that's the case, I don't believe there is a way to use 'sort' like that ... ?'I'm glad I could sort it for you.' (??? I'm American. So, I'm guessing here) The only way I know would be to change the subject to the inclusive 'we'. "I'm glad we could get this sorted." Anyway, EnglishCoach's other sentences are a great addition and what you were told will also work just fine, but maybe that will help with 'sorted'. |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? Hi Mark - no, in British English your reasoning doesn't work. Get something sorted (out) means resolve the problem. I didn't realise it was only British English though - that undoubtedly explains the original correction. With just the verb I'd tend to always use out - I'm glad I could sort that out for you - but that may be just me. I hope that's got that sorted :) |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? I see now how it could fit in a situation where the speaker did the 'sorting', but chrisode, can we have the context of the original phrase? |
Re: I'M GLAD I COULD GET THIS SORTED? I appreciate your comment on this, mesmark. After fixing some problems on the customer's account, he said, "Thank you very much for your help". I then replied, "You're very welcome, I'm glad that I could get this sorted out for you". I'm glad that "we" could get this sorted - that's what I've been hearing from other people I just changed it to "I" to make it seem like it's all me who sorted the problem which was true :) So, what you think mesmark that, it's wrong if I say "You're welcome. I'm glad that I could get this sorted out for you"? it should always be "WE" when that sentence is used? |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:52 am. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0 PL2