You say, "I'm looking forward to meeting you." or "I'm looking forward to seeing you again!"
Almost. It would be correct of you to say "I look forward to seeing you all soon," changing the verb "see" into its gerund form, "seeing."
je suis moi aussi impatient de vous voir
Preview does NOT mean to look forward to. Preview means something more like .. seeing something ahead of the normal timeframe. Like a movie preview, which is an advance showing before its public opening. For "to look forward to" - you might be thinking of the word - Anticipate.
It would mean "we hope", "we wait", "we look forward to".
The past tense of "we look forward to seeing you" is "we looked forward to seeing you."
Yes, "I look forward to seeing you" Is correct grammar.
The correct phrase is "look forward to seeing you on Saturday." This form is the most commonly used and grammatically correct way to express anticipation for seeing someone on a specific day.
No, the correct sentence is "I look forward to seeing you." This uses the -ing form after "to" to show the action that you are looking forward to.
You can reply by saying "Me too, I look forward to seeing you as well."
do you say I look for seeing you or I look forward to seeing you
In this sentence, the correct word to use is "there." "I look forward to seeing you there." "There" is used to refer to a place or location, while "their" is a possessive pronoun indicating possession by a group of people.
What are you asking? then ask it again soit makes sense because " I look forward to seeing you soon" sounds like exactly what it says. What's to ask?
You say, "I'm looking forward to meeting you." or "I'm looking forward to seeing you again!"
Almost. It would be correct of you to say "I look forward to seeing you all soon," changing the verb "see" into its gerund form, "seeing."
like this: i kuangalia mbele kuona wewe
if they're are almost all you can think about and you look forward to seeing them.