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"i" vs "I have already informed"

The phrases "i" and "i have already informed" are not directly comparable as they serve different purposes. "I" is a subject pronoun used to refer to oneself, while "I have already informed" is a complete sentence indicating that the speaker has already given information to someone. It would be more appropriate to compare "I have already informed" with a similar complete sentence.

Last Updated: March 17, 2024

i

This is correct as "I" is a subject pronoun used to refer to oneself.

Use "I" as a subject pronoun at the beginning of a sentence to refer to yourself.

I have already informed

This is correct

This is a formal way to say that you have already told someone something.

ExpertExplanation provided by a TextRanch English expert


Some examples from our editors:

  • I have already informed my colleague that you will not be attending.
  • I have already informed my boss that the meeting has been cancelled.

Some alternatives from our editors:

  • already informed
  • have already advised
  • have already told

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