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  1. 4 sept. 2014 · Sep 4, 2014. #2. My consultant (OED) says. (happy about) having a sense of trust and confidence in (a person, arrangement, or situation) he was not happy about the proposals. (happy with) satisfied with the quality or standard of I'm happy with his performance. Mapping those onto your examples, happy with the news transforms into "satisfied ...

  2. 30 mars 2008 · "I should be happy to " is horribly stilted and would only be said by an officious person or indeed the queen. Most everyone else avoids the should/would and shall/will by using 'd and 'll. In spoken English, "I'd/I'll be happy to answer them" is what would be said without betraying any social standing.

  3. 28 nov. 2007 · 1) has the sense that you are a happy couple and a married couple (i.e. you are happy over and above your good marriage) 2) has the sense that you are a couple who are happily married (you may have other problems, but your marriage is happy) #2 would be the most frequently encountered expression.

  4. 8 avr. 2021 · Punjabi. Apr 8, 2021. #1. My friend got a government job after seven years of joblessness. He was happy for/of being selected as an assistant director. He thanked his friends for the good wishes. Source: self-made.

  5. 1 juin 2009 · Jun 1, 2009. #3. Gorgiewave said: Delighted is more intense than happy and lasts longer. One might be delighted by news, an exam result, a baby being born. Happy suggests a more universal contentment (although one may be both happy and in a bad mood). No, I think that is confusing advice. 'Contentment' is the state of being generally satisfied ...

  6. 21 janv. 2006 · Jan 21, 2006. #2. On parle en français de Nouvel An Chinois. Je pense que lorsque l'on fête la nouvelle année à un Chinois, il est évident pour lui qu'il ne s'agit pas de la même année que celle du calendrier chrétien et, donc, je dirais tout simplement : Bonne année !

  7. 2 juin 2008 · Strangely enough, "happy belated birthday" receives a vastly larger number of Google results (over 2,200,000) than the more logically correct "belated happy birthday" (330,000). I'm going to buck the trend and be logically correct from now on! OMG, it's true. I just did a Google search and I got similar results.

  8. 7 janv. 2015 · Hapy New Year, gainnini21! Somehow "Hi, Mike, Happy New Year [when writing, we use capials] too!" doesn't sound like a "first choice" among possible expressions. "And to you!" might be another 'short version'. : "Same to you!" can, depending on context, tone of voice, etc, be used to reply to an insult. I bet you're thinking of the Italian ...

  9. 10 sept. 2015 · Colorado. English-US. Sep 10, 2015. #2. You can use both "with" and "in" in a sentence that talks about jobs. If you are happy "in" your job, you are happy when you are doing that job. This sentence seems a little unusual to me. If you are happy "with" your job, you are glad because you have that job. Both sentences mean roughly the same thing.

  10. 18 sept. 2010 · Of happy memory:- generally, reserved for high ranking royals, such as a king or queen. (The death of George VI of England was announced as: Our Late Sovereign Lord King George the Sixth of blessed and glorious memory ...). (After her father's death, when Elizabeth II was proclaimed Queen, the phrase was again used:- Princess Elizabeth ...

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