I confirm or I do confirm? - WordReference Forums "I do confirm" can be used if there is a particular reason to use it Where were you thinking of using it Zasso? We would need some context and a complete sentence
confirm whether if I am correct | WordReference Forums With more formal words such as 'confirm' there may be a preference for 'whether', but 'if' is certainly correct too The choice between 'whether' 'if' on the one hand and 'that' on the other depends on how certain you already are: if you think you are correct, and you just want someone to confirm it, you're more likely to use the statement
confirm to confirm with | WordReference Forums I can't get my head around this! "Please confirm your participation to my secretary " "Please confirm your participation with my secretary "
I can confirm you I can confirm to you | WordReference Forums You can say I can confirm to you that tomorrow Simpler is to leave out to you, i e I can confirm that tomorrow I'll be available I can confirm tomorrow that means that you do the confirming tomorrow, which is not what I think you mean Tomorrow should come after that
We confirmed vs we are confirmed | WordReference Forums hi, In the formal confirmation letter , when I should be used "confirmed" or " are confirmed "? My letter is: Thank you for your signing up our event We (are) confirmed you that we have your name on our list The event will be held on Friday, July 4 at 2pm We look forward to seeing you soon
comfirm in on with - WordReference Forums We might say, "I wish to confirm my flight QF128 at such and such a time" We do not confirm somebody except, perhaps, in a totally different sense of 'confirm' and that is a religious one; a right of confirmation We cannot 'confirm on' anything except, perhaps, to say something such as, "I will confirm on Wednesday" but this is unusual Examples:
confirm lt;that gt; you are right [omission that] - WordReference Forums The choice of "confirm" or "think" has nothing to do with using or not using "that " Either verb can be used with or without "that " The statement in the original post, that "that" is mandatory in the example sentence, is not correct You can say "I can confirm you are right" if you want to
confirm from with - WordReference Forums Hi, s21d You probably need some sort of pronoun for a normal sentence: I confirmed it with the internet "With the internet" sounds okay to me, but I prefer "on": I confirmed it on the internet
I can confirm it - WordReference Forums The "it" in "confirm it" does not refer to "the bug" or "the behavior" We would not use those as objects of the verb "confirm" We "confirm" a statement, a claim or a fact It is possible to "confirm" the claim that a problem exists, but not to "confirm" a problem To say "I can try reproducing the issue for you "