” If it is more formal, a job contact, you can say “’It was great meeting you also, I will keep your contact info and let you know if something comes up that w
New York - 26 January 2002 President Levine, Chancellor Levy, Esteemed Educators and Teachers, Students, Ladies and Gentlemen: It is a pleasure to join you for this immensely important gathering - and it is a privilege to be in the company of so many dedicated professionals, whose work, day in and day out, serves the best interests of our most precious resource - children
or
] talk to me - it would be a pleasure to meet you
The meaning and usage is completely interchangeable
Makes you think how paradise will work when so much of the world and language is full of “pagan” things that most people never think about
Great seeing you
It was nice meeting you, we have shared good memories but my main worry is losing you
It will be my pleasure to present my art work in the museum
After our conversation, I am confident that my skills and experiences are a great match for this opportunity
Theres not enough hypothetical or conditional weight to the phrase pleasure to meet you for us to comfortably use it in the future: its really best in present or past tense
If the comment comes at the start of a meeting, you would use the present tense
(more formal) At the end of a meeting, use the past tense: It was very nice to meet you too
It’s good/great/nice to meet you
It was really nice to meet you
exact ( 2 ) So dumbly ingrained is our notion of the standard-issue Victorian father — the pious ogre with his whipping belts — that it is always a pleasure to meet his opposite
” ‘As well’ is an adverb that means ‘too
It would be a pleasure to meet up with you anytime you are in Europe and to discuss