English Language & Usage Asked on December 19, 2020
When writing an email I started off with this sentence but now I am having doubts on using ‘Meanwhile’ at the beginning of a question.
Meanwhile my absence, did you receive an answer to your mail by one of my colleagues?
I am aware that I could change it but I just wanted to know if the sentence is correct or if it’s just a side effect of having to use multiple languages a day?
Meanwhile may be used to start a sentence, but not in the way you have attempted.
“I was absent with illness. Meanwhile, my colleagues dealt with my emails”. Meanwhile here refers to the period during which I was ill.
Meanwhile =
until something expected happens, or while something else is happening:
Meanwhile has the connotation that something else is, was, or will be happening; during does not.
You have used the word as if it were synonymous with during; this is incorrect usage.
During =
at some time between the beginning and the end of a period:
Answered by Anton on December 19, 2020
Meanwhile is an adverb. Like all adverbs it can start a sentence:
Meanwhile, comma in my absence, did you receive an answer to your mail by one of my colleagues?
Recently, comma in my absence,
On Tuesday, comma in my absence,
etc.
OED: B. adv.
1877 J. A. Froude Short Stud. (1883) IV. i. x. 113 The archbishop meanwhile had returned from his adventurous expedition.
Answered by Greybeard on December 19, 2020
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