How to tell this in good professional manner in english? [closed]
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In interview if interviewer asking me "Do you have knowledge in .net programming?", Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me? So how to reply for that question in very professional manner?
Is this correct?==>"If you get train me i will work".
Thanks
grammar questions professions
New contributor
closed as off-topic by RegDwigнt♦ Apr 2 at 7:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Proofreading questions are off-topic unless a specific source of concern in the text is clearly identified." – RegDwigнt
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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In interview if interviewer asking me "Do you have knowledge in .net programming?", Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me? So how to reply for that question in very professional manner?
Is this correct?==>"If you get train me i will work".
Thanks
grammar questions professions
New contributor
closed as off-topic by RegDwigнt♦ Apr 2 at 7:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Proofreading questions are off-topic unless a specific source of concern in the text is clearly identified." – RegDwigнt
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
What do you mean by I will work? Do you mean: If you train me I will take the job? Or is it: If you train me I will work hard to learn .net programming?
– Shoe
Apr 2 at 7:54
At any rate, "Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me" looks more like English than what you are trying to say instead. Why don't you just take the words you used to explain it to us, and use these exact same words to explain it to them.
– RegDwigнt♦
Apr 2 at 7:55
How about this: “I haven’t programmed in .net, so I’d need a few weeks to come up to speed.” A language like .net you will have to learn on your own. No employer will pay you to learn it. If you are applying for a professional level position, you are expected to have core programming skills that can be applied in any number of target languages.
– Global Charm
Apr 3 at 6:49
add a comment |
In interview if interviewer asking me "Do you have knowledge in .net programming?", Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me? So how to reply for that question in very professional manner?
Is this correct?==>"If you get train me i will work".
Thanks
grammar questions professions
New contributor
In interview if interviewer asking me "Do you have knowledge in .net programming?", Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me? So how to reply for that question in very professional manner?
Is this correct?==>"If you get train me i will work".
Thanks
grammar questions professions
grammar questions professions
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked Apr 2 at 7:46
user6161user6161
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1
New contributor
New contributor
closed as off-topic by RegDwigнt♦ Apr 2 at 7:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Proofreading questions are off-topic unless a specific source of concern in the text is clearly identified." – RegDwigнt
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as off-topic by RegDwigнt♦ Apr 2 at 7:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Proofreading questions are off-topic unless a specific source of concern in the text is clearly identified." – RegDwigнt
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
What do you mean by I will work? Do you mean: If you train me I will take the job? Or is it: If you train me I will work hard to learn .net programming?
– Shoe
Apr 2 at 7:54
At any rate, "Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me" looks more like English than what you are trying to say instead. Why don't you just take the words you used to explain it to us, and use these exact same words to explain it to them.
– RegDwigнt♦
Apr 2 at 7:55
How about this: “I haven’t programmed in .net, so I’d need a few weeks to come up to speed.” A language like .net you will have to learn on your own. No employer will pay you to learn it. If you are applying for a professional level position, you are expected to have core programming skills that can be applied in any number of target languages.
– Global Charm
Apr 3 at 6:49
add a comment |
What do you mean by I will work? Do you mean: If you train me I will take the job? Or is it: If you train me I will work hard to learn .net programming?
– Shoe
Apr 2 at 7:54
At any rate, "Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me" looks more like English than what you are trying to say instead. Why don't you just take the words you used to explain it to us, and use these exact same words to explain it to them.
– RegDwigнt♦
Apr 2 at 7:55
How about this: “I haven’t programmed in .net, so I’d need a few weeks to come up to speed.” A language like .net you will have to learn on your own. No employer will pay you to learn it. If you are applying for a professional level position, you are expected to have core programming skills that can be applied in any number of target languages.
– Global Charm
Apr 3 at 6:49
What do you mean by I will work? Do you mean: If you train me I will take the job? Or is it: If you train me I will work hard to learn .net programming?
– Shoe
Apr 2 at 7:54
What do you mean by I will work? Do you mean: If you train me I will take the job? Or is it: If you train me I will work hard to learn .net programming?
– Shoe
Apr 2 at 7:54
At any rate, "Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me" looks more like English than what you are trying to say instead. Why don't you just take the words you used to explain it to us, and use these exact same words to explain it to them.
– RegDwigнt♦
Apr 2 at 7:55
At any rate, "Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me" looks more like English than what you are trying to say instead. Why don't you just take the words you used to explain it to us, and use these exact same words to explain it to them.
– RegDwigнt♦
Apr 2 at 7:55
How about this: “I haven’t programmed in .net, so I’d need a few weeks to come up to speed.” A language like .net you will have to learn on your own. No employer will pay you to learn it. If you are applying for a professional level position, you are expected to have core programming skills that can be applied in any number of target languages.
– Global Charm
Apr 3 at 6:49
How about this: “I haven’t programmed in .net, so I’d need a few weeks to come up to speed.” A language like .net you will have to learn on your own. No employer will pay you to learn it. If you are applying for a professional level position, you are expected to have core programming skills that can be applied in any number of target languages.
– Global Charm
Apr 3 at 6:49
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What do you mean by I will work? Do you mean: If you train me I will take the job? Or is it: If you train me I will work hard to learn .net programming?
– Shoe
Apr 2 at 7:54
At any rate, "Actually i don't have knowledge in .net, but i will work if they train me" looks more like English than what you are trying to say instead. Why don't you just take the words you used to explain it to us, and use these exact same words to explain it to them.
– RegDwigнt♦
Apr 2 at 7:55
How about this: “I haven’t programmed in .net, so I’d need a few weeks to come up to speed.” A language like .net you will have to learn on your own. No employer will pay you to learn it. If you are applying for a professional level position, you are expected to have core programming skills that can be applied in any number of target languages.
– Global Charm
Apr 3 at 6:49