Yun
Knowing or having known When writing a letter, I have a dilemma about using “ knowing that you are conducting a research, I am writing to give you some related information.” or “having known that you are conducting a research, I am writing to give you some related information.” Which one is correct? Thank you in advance.
Jun 18, 2020 2:03 AM
Answers · 4
2
Hi Yun, the first option is best in this case as the tenses match — "knowing" and "writing" — verses the passive past tense of the second option.
June 18, 2020
The first one is the best. To put it in simple English, "having known" is used when you are talking about something in the past. For example, "YESTERDAY, having known that she would be here at 6:00 AM, I left the house a bit earlier." "knowing X, Y" means "at this time I know that X is the case, therefore Y" I hope that helps ^_^
June 18, 2020
(Responded in the wrong area.)
June 18, 2020
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