qa engineer cover letter

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Business English at Work © 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

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Cover letter for QA/Manual/Automation/Lead/Testing Engineer.

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Page 1: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work© 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

Page 2: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

ObjectivesIdentify prepositions.Recognize prepositional phrases, objects of prepositions, and compound prepositions.Differentiate between infinitive phrases and prepositional phrases.

PP 14-1a

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Page 3: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Objectives

PP 14-1b

continuedcontinued

Recognize the functions of prepositional phrases as adjectives and adverbs. Determine inclusion, exclusion, and placement of prepositions.

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Page 4: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Objectives

PP 14-1c

continuedcontinued

Differentiate between commonly confused prepositions.Use the correct idiomatic prepositional combinations.

Page 5: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Use of Prepositions

PP 14-2

Use a preposition to connect the object of the preposition (noun or pronoun) to another word or set of words in a sentence.

Our manager recognizes our strengths and compensates for our weaknesses.Top executives spend approximately 90 percent of their time with others.The need for constant approval at work can be counterproductive.

Page 6: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Common Prepositions

PP 14-3

about behind during on throughout

above below except onto to

across beneath for opposite toward

after beside from out under

against besides in outside underneath

Page 7: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Compound Prepositions

PP 14-4a

A compound preposition consists of a combination of words that is often considered as one preposition and connects the object of a preposition to another word or set of words.

according to in place of ahead ofin regard to along with in spite ofapart from instead of because ofby means of in front of out of

Examples

Page 8: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Compound Prepositions

PP 14-4b

I gave the company tour on behalf of my manager.In addition to Sara, we have five vice presidents in our company.Because of my positive attitude, Mary chose me as group leader.

Examples

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Page 9: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Infinitive Phrases/ Prepositional Phrases

PP 14-5

An infinitive phrase consists of the word to followed by a verb. A leader has to dramatize a vision for his or her organization.Employers need to build the trust of their employees.

No verb appears in a prepositional phrase. Leaders set high goals and objectives for themselves.

Page 10: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Prepositions and Adverbs

PP 14-6

The words by, through, and in can be used as adverbs without objects. When these same words take objects, they are prepositions.

Casual Fridays are in. (In is an adverb that answers the question Where? No object follows the word in.) Causal Friday attire is described in the company handbook. (In is a preposition. In this sentence, it takes the object handbook.)

Page 11: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Objects of Prepositions and Pronouns

PP 14-7

Use the objective case of a pronoun as the object of a preposition.

her him you me us them it whom Objective Case

We awarded the Web design project to them.Between you and me, I prefer working in the accounting department.

Page 12: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Adjective Functions

PP 14-8

Use a prepositional phrase as an adjective to modify a noun or a pronoun. Place the prepositional phrase after the word or words being modified or after a linking verb.

Carol requested an office with a window.John Garcia from Newsweek will interview our president next week.Richard was in Bolivia when he learned about the merger.

Page 13: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Adverb Functions

PP 14-9

Use a prepositional phrase as an adverb to modify a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.

A leader assists in problem solving.A motivated employee completes all assignments with enthusiasm.

Page 14: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

General Placement

PP 14-10a

Avoid ending a sentence with a preposition.Place a preposition before its object in the majority of sentences.

We did not know the appointments he was scheduled for.

Avoid

We did not know the appointments for which he was scheduled.

Revised

Page 15: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

General Placement

PP 14-10b

Examples

Some of the technology jargon is difficult to relate to.

Avoid

I find it difficult to relate to some of the technology jargon.

Revised

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Page 16: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Inclusion of Necessary Prepositions

PP 14-11

Do not omit a preposition when it is needed. The cancelled flight prevented Lynn from going to the leadership seminar. Use separate prepositions when words cannot be related to one object by the same preposition.Doug has knowledge of and experience with various management techniques.

Page 17: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Omission of Unnecessary Prepositions

PP 14-12

Omit prepositions that do not add clarity to the meaning of a sentence.

Our international headquarters are near the San Francisco airport. (Do not use near to the San Francisco airport.)

Do not repeat a preposition in a sentence if phrases make sense by using the same preposition.

Our president speaks at national and international leadership seminars. (The preposition at does not need to be repeated before national and international since the same preposition applies to both phrases.)

Page 18: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Beside/Besides

PP 14-13

Use beside as a preposition to mean “by the side of” or “not connected with something.” Darrell usually sits beside me during management staff meetings. Use besides as a preposition to mean “in addition to” or “other than.” Besides Sherry, the manager promoted Joyce and Bob.

Page 19: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Among/Between

PP 14-14

Use between to refer to two persons, places, activities, ideas, things, or qualities.Our manager distributed the work between the two programmers. Use among to refer to more than two persons, places, activities, ideas, things, or qualities.I was among those who voted for Andy as the team leader.

Page 20: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Different From

PP 14-15

Use the word different followed by the preposition from when from connects an object to another word or set of words in a sentence.

The latest sales figures are different from what I expected.Marion’s leadership style is quite different from mine.

Page 21: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Like/As

PP 14-16

Use like to mean “similarly to” or “resembling.”Do not use a verb after the preposition like.Do not use like to join clauses. Stacy handles her responsibilities like a true leader.We are looking for a manager with leadership characteristics like Gordon’s.

Use the conjunction as or as if to join clauses.Stacy acts as if she wants to be a leader.This schedule looks as if it were hastily developed.

Page 22: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Off/From

PP 14-17

Do not use off of in prepositional phrases. Roger was positive that Edward took the production results off his desk. (Do not use off of his desk.)

Do not substitute off for from in certain phrases. Lorraine borrowed paper from Erica during the meeting. (Do not use off Erica as the prepositional phrase.)

Page 23: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

In/Into

PP 14-18

Use in to indicate a “location or position within a place.”Please place your self-evaluation form in my mailbox.

Use into to indicate “movement or direction from outside to inside” or a “change of condition or form.”Please step into my office to discuss your concerns.We divided the report into three sections.

Page 24: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

To/Too/Two

PP 14-19a

Use the preposition to to indicate “toward.” Please e-mail this message to all the other managers.

Use to as an infinitive or as a part of an infinitive phrase. She plans to promote Gale next month.

Use too as an adverb to indicate an “excessive amount” or “also.” The president made the hiring decision too quickly.Our company is moving to Minneapolis too.

Page 25: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

To/Too/Two

PP 14-19b

Use two to indicate the number.

We have two outstanding candidates for the R.B. Rutledge Leadership Award this year. The selection committee chose two candidates for the president to interview.

continuedcontinued

Page 26: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Identification of Idiomatic Expressions

PP 14-20

An idiom refers to an expression that has evolved from general usage through the years but which has no established rule for this usage.Many idioms involve a verb and preposition combination.

Page 27: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Accompanied by/ Accompanied by or with

PP 14-20

accompanied by (a person)

accompanied by or with

(an item)

Wesley is accompanied by an interpreter on his trips to Japan.Jan’s leadership award was accompanied with a check for $500.

Page 28: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

adapted from (taken from another source)

adapted to (adjusted to)

Adapted from/Adapted to

PP 14-22

Our performance evaluation is adapted from a computer software program that Leon purchased.

The new manager soon adapted to our company’s culture.

Page 29: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

agree in (principle)

agree on (plan)

agree with (a person)

Agree in/Agree on/ Agree with

PP 14-23

Oscar agreed in principle with the plan for the new building.

The staff agreed on the need to lengthen our customer service hours.

The managers agreed with the employees about replacing the copy machine.

Page 30: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Angry at/Angry about/Angry with

PP 14-24

Bill is angry about our antiquated e-mail system.

My manager was angry with Lucy for not regulating Internet usage in her department.

angry at, angry about (a situation)

angry with (person)

Page 31: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Argue about/Argue for/Argue with

PP 14-25

Several employees argued about the evaluation system.

Our manager argued for decision-making software.

Sometimes I argue with Richard.

argue about (situation) argue for (something) argue with (person)

Page 32: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Arrive at/Arrive by

PP 14-26

She will arrive at 6 p.m.

They plan to arrive by train.

Peggy plans to arrive in St. Louis by Monday.

arrive at (time, specific location, conclusion)

arrive by (type of transport) arrive in (general location)

Page 33: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Concur in/Concur with

PP 14-27

Most employees concurred in recommending that we reorganize our department.

Do you concur with Zachary about the lack of leadership in our company?

concur in (an opinion)

concur with (a person)

Page 34: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Correspond by/Correspond to/ Correspond with

PP 14-28

We feel that correspondence by mail is too slow.

The expense allocation corresponded to employee requests.

Our president corresponds with a leadership consultant in Vail.

correspond by (means)

correspond to (show similarity)

correspond with (a person by writing)

Page 35: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Enter in or on/Enter into

PP 14-29

Our receptionist enters every visitor’s name and address in a log book.

The union and the managers entered into a binding arbitration agreement.

enter in or on (record)

enter into (agreement)

Page 36: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Live at/Live in/Live on

PP 14-30

We decided that those lawyers must live at their offices.

Most federal workers live in the Washington, D.C. area.

I could not live on the salary that they offered me during the interview.

live at (address, place)

live in (area)

live on (street, amount)

Page 37: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Reconciled to/ Reconciled with

PP 14-31

We are finally reconciled to the fact that we will not receive a raise this year.

Our accountant insists on the reconciliation of our returns with the sales.

reconciled to (to accept)

reconciled with (to bring into agreement)

Page 38: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Talk about/Talk for

PP 14-32

Lorraine did not want to talk about her salary.

The manager talked for an hour about the reorganization plans.

talk about (something) talk for (time period)

Page 39: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Talk to/Talk with

PP 14-33

Have you talked to your coworkers about your concerns?

Loretta and I talked with our manager about job sharing.

talk to (tell something to someone or to an audience)

talk with (converse with an individual or small group)

Page 40: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work

PrepositionsPrepositions

Wait at/Wait for/Wait on

PP 14-34

Please wait at the front door for a security clearance.

We waited for our manager’s response to the scheduling problem.

Waiting on a customer is always a first priority for us.

wait at (location) wait for (person, thing)

wait on (customer)

Page 41: QA Engineer Cover Letter

Business English at Work© 2003 Glencoe/McGraw-Hill

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