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  1. 23 mars 2018 · Mar 23, 2018. #1. What should I use: 1.We make home delivery. Or. 2.We do home delivery. And delivery here means food / delivery of any kind like online shopping. So is my sentence correct?

  2. 1 avr. 2013 · Member. Milan. Italian. Apr 1, 2013. #6. As for the singular/plural form of “delivery”, I think there’s a slight difference. For example “We make/do home delivery” is referring to the service offered, whereas “We make/do deliveries” sounds more like the concrete act of delivering to me. It’s just an impression though.

  3. 23 juin 2014 · In my opinion: "deliver" is a neutral term. If you order something from a company, on the internet, from a store, etc. it gets "delivered". The mail is also "delivered". When you "hand something over", the person who is getting/receiving the "something" is either a person of authority or power or the person is in a position of control.

  4. 23 sept. 2014 · Yes, I've read a dictionary, it says :courier. a person or company that takes messages, letters, or parcels from one person or place to another. a delievery man/person. a man who delivers goods to people's houses or places of work. All what I asked was if they are interchangable or not . No you didn't, you specifically asked about "delivery boy".

  5. 8 déc. 2015 · If I say “The delivery time/period is 5 working days.”, will it mean: 1. The production time for the product X is 5 working days (no information about the shipment time). 2. The product in question will be delivered at the address of the client’s choice within 5 working days (no information about the production time). 3.

  6. 17 mai 2012 · Senior Member. English - England. May 17, 2012. #4. The 'delivery period' in the construction industry is generally used to mean the time from the formal signing of the contract to the handover of the finished building. As papakapp mentioned, it's the equivalent of 'lead time' but seen from the supplier's point of view instead of the customer's.

  7. 10 mai 2007 · England (English) May 10, 2007. #3. Dispatch is when it (the package) leaves the warehouse, and is loaded on to the lorry. Delivery is when it arrives at its destination. S.

  8. 12 janv. 2015 · skydown13 said: The supplier is slow on sending us the goods so we want to urge the supplier for an earlier delivery date. In that case, you would not send a message to the supplier saying "We urge the supplier for an earlier delivery date" or "We urge the supplier to provide us with an earlier delivery date" (your sentences from post 1).

  9. 11 juin 2022 · Personally, I find the whole question involving "delivery" rather pointless. If the person is waiting for their lunch, obviously someone is going to deliver it. It may be someone from a restaurant or it may be their mother, for example. If you're really wondering if the person "ordered fast food from a restaurant," I would ask: Did you order ...

  10. 9 oct. 2012 · English - American. Oct 9, 2012. #2. "I'm not sure about "Out of delivery," but I frequently see a similar message on package tracking webpages, "Out for delivery," meaning that the parcel has arrived in the destination city, that it is on a delivery vehicle, and that it should be delivered shortly to the intended recipient.

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