Can I please or could I please?
Both are correct. The first is more direct, and the second is more polite. Could you please . . . gives slightly more room for refusal than Can you please . . .
How do you politely ask for a status update?
Requesting Status Updates
- 1 Ask. Drop the “checking in” wind-up and ask for an update politely and directly.
- 2 Open with context.
- 3 Send a friendly reminder.
- 4 Offer something of value.
- 5 Reference a blog post they (or their company) published.
- 6 Drop a name.
- 7 Recommend an event you’re attending in their area.
Could I have a glass of water please?
In informal contexts it’s perfectly acceptable to use can; in formal situations it would be better to use may. May I have a glass of water, please? It never hurts to add “please” to make the request more polite.
How do you ask for water in English?
The correct way to ask, in English, for tap water could easily be, as you suggest, JungKim, Can I have some water, please? or Can I have a glass of water, please? or Can I have a jug of water, please? in ascending order of boldness or bottle, in a smart establishment.
Can I have water please some or any?
Only use “some” and “any” with uncountable nouns and plural countable nouns: She wants some water. (water = uncountable noun)
Can I have some more please correct?
In the US, both are fine and common, at least among younger people, but the second is more informal. “Get” doesn’t necessarily mean you are asking to get it yourself. “Can I get more water please” is an acceptable way to ask a server to bring you more water. But it is a bit informal.
Can I get is correct?
You mean: “Can I get?” Is it grammatically correct? “Can I get?” is grammatically correct, but that doesn’t mean it’s always the right way to express your meaning.
Can you rude?
Using can instead of may isn’t necessarily rude, though there are times when may is considered more polite. It depends on the context. Can refers to ability. May could be used to request permission or to express a possibility.
Have you got any money or some money?
When talking about quantity, or how much there is of something, the two most important words are any and some. “Any” is generally used to ask if there is more than one of something. This kind of question is a “yes no” question, meaning that the answer is “yes” or “no”: “Do you have any money?” (No, I don’t.)
Do u have any money on u?
Usually used when someone is asking if you have any money with you. “Are you carrying money.” “Do you have any money” On you is referring to you as a person so they are usually asking if you have it currently with you.
Is much money correct?
‘Money’ and ‘cash’ are uncountable nouns, whereas ‘notes’ and ‘coins’ are countable nouns. It’s incorrect to use the adjective ‘many’ before uncountable nouns like money,cash, rice, oil etc. Therefore ‘how much money ‘ is correct.