Users' questions

Which is correct convenient to you or convenient for you?

Which is correct convenient to you or convenient for you?

While the phrase convenient for you is much the more common of the two, it could be that convenient to you is more likely to be used with this second sense. Here are some examples from a quick search: Call the office most convenient to you. Choose a venue convenient to you.

Which is convenient or that is convenient?

“Convenience” is the state of being convenient. One’s convenience is when they find something easier to do. Convenience can be used as an adjective in one place that I know of: A convenience store is a store that’s trying to be convenient. A convenient store just happens to be convenient even if it isn’t trying.

How do you say your convenience time?

No, saying “at your convenience” is generally understood to be a polite way of saying that you recognize that the other person is very busy, and so asking them to choose a time for a meeting instead of you selecting a time.

Which preposition is used with convenient?

In 17% of cases convenient to is used It just seems too convenient to me. Seems pretty darned convenient to me. So this is awesomely convenient to me. We are convenient to all of Birmingham and only 15 minutes from the downtown area.

What is your convenient time?

“your convenient time”: This is unnatural. You would use “time convenient for you” if you want to stress on the addressee’s convenience or “a convenient time” if you want to talk about a time convenient to both of you.

How do you use the word convenient?

Convenient sentence example

  1. Put things where they will be most convenient for you.
  2. A ” Geyser ” is a very convenient form of apparatus for heating a quantity of water in a short time.
  3. It is convenient to distinguish buds that give rise to polyps from those that form medusae.

What is the convenient time?

A convenient time to do something, for example to meet someone, is a time when you are free to do it or would like to do it. She will try to arrange a mutually convenient time and place for an interview.

How do you describe convenient?

suitable or agreeable to the needs or purpose; well-suited with respect to facility or ease in use; favorable, easy, or comfortable for use. at hand; easily accessible: Their house is convenient to all transportation.

What’s another way of saying for your convenience?

“I am confident that I possess all the necessary qualifications for the position and am ready to meet with you at your convenience.”…What is another word for at your convenience?

at your leisure when convenient
in your own time whenever you like
when it suits you when you can
at a suitable time in a spare moment

How do you use convenient in a sentence?

Can we have a call at your convenience?

Or, you can emphasize that they can call at a time when it would be convenient for them: You can call me whenever it’s convenient for you. The phrase “at your convenience” is sometimes used: You can call me at your convenience.

Do it in your most convenient time meaning?

Whenever one wishes; also, as soon as one can. For example, Pick up the car any time, at your convenience, or We need that drawing very soon, so please finish it at your earliest convenience. The use of convenience in the sense of “ease” or “absence of trouble” dates from about 1700.

Which is more common, ” convenient for you ” or ” convenient to you “?

But “a time convenient to you” is more common than “a time convenient for you”, and I don’t think there will be many “false positives” with that wording – FumbleFingers Jan 29 ’12 at 16:41 The impersonal expression it is convenient for you is 10 times more common (151,000) in Bing than it is convenient to you (15,000).

Is it grammatically correct to say’at a time of Your Convenience’?

(“At your convenience” and “at a time convenient for you” are valid equivalents.) Yes, it’s grammatically correct, but it sounds a bit stilted. You might use this expression in very formal writing, but even there it would be better to say, when it would be convenient [for you].

Can you use ” any ” and ” convenient ” in the same sentence?

You can use “any” and “convenient” in the same sentence, but not the way you wrote it. You can tell someone they can call you whenever they want by saying “at any time” (sometimes this is shortened to “anytime”): You can call me at any time. You can call me anytime.

Can You Call Me in your convenient any time?

“You may call me in your convenient any time.” I am confusing whether I could use ” convenient ” and ” any ” at the same time. Also, I’d like to know the different nuance between may and can, in this sentence: You may call me in your convenient any time. You can use “any” and “convenient” in the same sentence, but not the way you wrote it.