Can you use 'miss' instead of 'forget'?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;







up vote
11
down vote

favorite












Today one of my coworkers sent an email saying:




Dear X, Please don't miss to send Y's laptop to the support today.




I kindly replied to him alone saying that it should've been:




Dear X, Please don't forget* ...




He told me that "miss" can be used in this context. Well my English isn't perfect, hence my question:



Is the word miss usable in that context?










share|improve this question























  • hi Paul! This question would be asked on the ELL site, where you will find a great answer.
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:13






  • 2




    @Fattie I am not "learning" english, I was just confused if this is actually something normal to say, specially that it's supposed to be a formal email. Anyhow, if this question is supposed to be in the ELL site then community can vote to transfer it there I suppose?
    – Paul Karam
    Aug 29 at 10:18










  • Hi Karam, for sure, it does not mean you are "learning!" English! That's the correct site for it - and as for me I don't know how to "move" it ! :)
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:53






  • 4




    Was you coworker Indian?
    – Azor Ahai
    Aug 29 at 20:57






  • 1




    It seems as though the sense of the sentence may be something like "Please don't miss the opportunity to send Y's laptop to the support [team] today."
    – Sven Yargs
    Aug 31 at 5:10
















up vote
11
down vote

favorite












Today one of my coworkers sent an email saying:




Dear X, Please don't miss to send Y's laptop to the support today.




I kindly replied to him alone saying that it should've been:




Dear X, Please don't forget* ...




He told me that "miss" can be used in this context. Well my English isn't perfect, hence my question:



Is the word miss usable in that context?










share|improve this question























  • hi Paul! This question would be asked on the ELL site, where you will find a great answer.
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:13






  • 2




    @Fattie I am not "learning" english, I was just confused if this is actually something normal to say, specially that it's supposed to be a formal email. Anyhow, if this question is supposed to be in the ELL site then community can vote to transfer it there I suppose?
    – Paul Karam
    Aug 29 at 10:18










  • Hi Karam, for sure, it does not mean you are "learning!" English! That's the correct site for it - and as for me I don't know how to "move" it ! :)
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:53






  • 4




    Was you coworker Indian?
    – Azor Ahai
    Aug 29 at 20:57






  • 1




    It seems as though the sense of the sentence may be something like "Please don't miss the opportunity to send Y's laptop to the support [team] today."
    – Sven Yargs
    Aug 31 at 5:10












up vote
11
down vote

favorite









up vote
11
down vote

favorite











Today one of my coworkers sent an email saying:




Dear X, Please don't miss to send Y's laptop to the support today.




I kindly replied to him alone saying that it should've been:




Dear X, Please don't forget* ...




He told me that "miss" can be used in this context. Well my English isn't perfect, hence my question:



Is the word miss usable in that context?










share|improve this question















Today one of my coworkers sent an email saying:




Dear X, Please don't miss to send Y's laptop to the support today.




I kindly replied to him alone saying that it should've been:




Dear X, Please don't forget* ...




He told me that "miss" can be used in this context. Well my English isn't perfect, hence my question:



Is the word miss usable in that context?







word-usage verbs






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 29 at 9:29









Community♦

1




1










asked Aug 29 at 6:42









Paul Karam

1668




1668











  • hi Paul! This question would be asked on the ELL site, where you will find a great answer.
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:13






  • 2




    @Fattie I am not "learning" english, I was just confused if this is actually something normal to say, specially that it's supposed to be a formal email. Anyhow, if this question is supposed to be in the ELL site then community can vote to transfer it there I suppose?
    – Paul Karam
    Aug 29 at 10:18










  • Hi Karam, for sure, it does not mean you are "learning!" English! That's the correct site for it - and as for me I don't know how to "move" it ! :)
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:53






  • 4




    Was you coworker Indian?
    – Azor Ahai
    Aug 29 at 20:57






  • 1




    It seems as though the sense of the sentence may be something like "Please don't miss the opportunity to send Y's laptop to the support [team] today."
    – Sven Yargs
    Aug 31 at 5:10
















  • hi Paul! This question would be asked on the ELL site, where you will find a great answer.
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:13






  • 2




    @Fattie I am not "learning" english, I was just confused if this is actually something normal to say, specially that it's supposed to be a formal email. Anyhow, if this question is supposed to be in the ELL site then community can vote to transfer it there I suppose?
    – Paul Karam
    Aug 29 at 10:18










  • Hi Karam, for sure, it does not mean you are "learning!" English! That's the correct site for it - and as for me I don't know how to "move" it ! :)
    – Fattie
    Aug 29 at 10:53






  • 4




    Was you coworker Indian?
    – Azor Ahai
    Aug 29 at 20:57






  • 1




    It seems as though the sense of the sentence may be something like "Please don't miss the opportunity to send Y's laptop to the support [team] today."
    – Sven Yargs
    Aug 31 at 5:10















hi Paul! This question would be asked on the ELL site, where you will find a great answer.
– Fattie
Aug 29 at 10:13




hi Paul! This question would be asked on the ELL site, where you will find a great answer.
– Fattie
Aug 29 at 10:13




2




2




@Fattie I am not "learning" english, I was just confused if this is actually something normal to say, specially that it's supposed to be a formal email. Anyhow, if this question is supposed to be in the ELL site then community can vote to transfer it there I suppose?
– Paul Karam
Aug 29 at 10:18




@Fattie I am not "learning" english, I was just confused if this is actually something normal to say, specially that it's supposed to be a formal email. Anyhow, if this question is supposed to be in the ELL site then community can vote to transfer it there I suppose?
– Paul Karam
Aug 29 at 10:18












Hi Karam, for sure, it does not mean you are "learning!" English! That's the correct site for it - and as for me I don't know how to "move" it ! :)
– Fattie
Aug 29 at 10:53




Hi Karam, for sure, it does not mean you are "learning!" English! That's the correct site for it - and as for me I don't know how to "move" it ! :)
– Fattie
Aug 29 at 10:53




4




4




Was you coworker Indian?
– Azor Ahai
Aug 29 at 20:57




Was you coworker Indian?
– Azor Ahai
Aug 29 at 20:57




1




1




It seems as though the sense of the sentence may be something like "Please don't miss the opportunity to send Y's laptop to the support [team] today."
– Sven Yargs
Aug 31 at 5:10




It seems as though the sense of the sentence may be something like "Please don't miss the opportunity to send Y's laptop to the support [team] today."
– Sven Yargs
Aug 31 at 5:10










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
47
down vote



accepted










The Oxford English Dictionary includes this usage under miss, v.1 II.5.a, but marks it archaic:




trans. To fail (to do something). With gerund, infinitive (now arch.), or (occasionally in Middle English) that-clause as object.




The construction seems to be alive and well in Indian English, either as a survival of the archaic construction or as an independent innovation; "don't miss to" gets plenty of Google-hits, many of them obviously Indian in origin.



Whether you consider it "usable" will probably depend on whether you're OK with using archaic constructions and/or Indian English. If not — e.g., if you want to sound like a native speaker — then you should avoid it.






share|improve this answer




















  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – MetaEd♦
    Aug 30 at 19:50

















up vote
6
down vote













Miss doesn't really work as it was used in your question. The only way I can think it could work is if you're referring to a complicated task with multiple sub-tasks.




When returning your laptop please do the following.



  • Remove work data

  • Uninstall un-approved applications

  • Change password

  • Mail back to home office

Please don't miss any of the above steps because they are all
important.




(although "forget" probably still makes more sense) The way "miss" makes sense is via metaphorical reference to a task where spots could be "missed" such as cleaning a floor "You missed a spot over there" you didn't forget it so much as fail to complete the task because some portion of the task was skipped.
Another acceptable usage would be:




Fed Ex shipments must be received by 2PM. Please don't miss that
deadline when you drop the laptop off.







share|improve this answer




















  • This is the correct answer. That the fully incorrect answer has 45 votes is just one of those strange things about ELU !!
    – Fattie
    Aug 30 at 15:40

















up vote
-1
down vote













Wherefore dost thou thinketh this construction shalt not be used?
It is not wrong, per se. But it is not considered a modern usage of the language.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Aug 29 at 21:11










Your Answer







StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "97"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: false,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













 

draft saved


draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f462202%2fcan-you-use-miss-instead-of-forget%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest






























3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes








3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
47
down vote



accepted










The Oxford English Dictionary includes this usage under miss, v.1 II.5.a, but marks it archaic:




trans. To fail (to do something). With gerund, infinitive (now arch.), or (occasionally in Middle English) that-clause as object.




The construction seems to be alive and well in Indian English, either as a survival of the archaic construction or as an independent innovation; "don't miss to" gets plenty of Google-hits, many of them obviously Indian in origin.



Whether you consider it "usable" will probably depend on whether you're OK with using archaic constructions and/or Indian English. If not — e.g., if you want to sound like a native speaker — then you should avoid it.






share|improve this answer




















  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – MetaEd♦
    Aug 30 at 19:50














up vote
47
down vote



accepted










The Oxford English Dictionary includes this usage under miss, v.1 II.5.a, but marks it archaic:




trans. To fail (to do something). With gerund, infinitive (now arch.), or (occasionally in Middle English) that-clause as object.




The construction seems to be alive and well in Indian English, either as a survival of the archaic construction or as an independent innovation; "don't miss to" gets plenty of Google-hits, many of them obviously Indian in origin.



Whether you consider it "usable" will probably depend on whether you're OK with using archaic constructions and/or Indian English. If not — e.g., if you want to sound like a native speaker — then you should avoid it.






share|improve this answer




















  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – MetaEd♦
    Aug 30 at 19:50












up vote
47
down vote



accepted







up vote
47
down vote



accepted






The Oxford English Dictionary includes this usage under miss, v.1 II.5.a, but marks it archaic:




trans. To fail (to do something). With gerund, infinitive (now arch.), or (occasionally in Middle English) that-clause as object.




The construction seems to be alive and well in Indian English, either as a survival of the archaic construction or as an independent innovation; "don't miss to" gets plenty of Google-hits, many of them obviously Indian in origin.



Whether you consider it "usable" will probably depend on whether you're OK with using archaic constructions and/or Indian English. If not — e.g., if you want to sound like a native speaker — then you should avoid it.






share|improve this answer












The Oxford English Dictionary includes this usage under miss, v.1 II.5.a, but marks it archaic:




trans. To fail (to do something). With gerund, infinitive (now arch.), or (occasionally in Middle English) that-clause as object.




The construction seems to be alive and well in Indian English, either as a survival of the archaic construction or as an independent innovation; "don't miss to" gets plenty of Google-hits, many of them obviously Indian in origin.



Whether you consider it "usable" will probably depend on whether you're OK with using archaic constructions and/or Indian English. If not — e.g., if you want to sound like a native speaker — then you should avoid it.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 29 at 7:04









ruakh

11.7k13346




11.7k13346











  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – MetaEd♦
    Aug 30 at 19:50
















  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – MetaEd♦
    Aug 30 at 19:50















Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– MetaEd♦
Aug 30 at 19:50




Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
– MetaEd♦
Aug 30 at 19:50












up vote
6
down vote













Miss doesn't really work as it was used in your question. The only way I can think it could work is if you're referring to a complicated task with multiple sub-tasks.




When returning your laptop please do the following.



  • Remove work data

  • Uninstall un-approved applications

  • Change password

  • Mail back to home office

Please don't miss any of the above steps because they are all
important.




(although "forget" probably still makes more sense) The way "miss" makes sense is via metaphorical reference to a task where spots could be "missed" such as cleaning a floor "You missed a spot over there" you didn't forget it so much as fail to complete the task because some portion of the task was skipped.
Another acceptable usage would be:




Fed Ex shipments must be received by 2PM. Please don't miss that
deadline when you drop the laptop off.







share|improve this answer




















  • This is the correct answer. That the fully incorrect answer has 45 votes is just one of those strange things about ELU !!
    – Fattie
    Aug 30 at 15:40














up vote
6
down vote













Miss doesn't really work as it was used in your question. The only way I can think it could work is if you're referring to a complicated task with multiple sub-tasks.




When returning your laptop please do the following.



  • Remove work data

  • Uninstall un-approved applications

  • Change password

  • Mail back to home office

Please don't miss any of the above steps because they are all
important.




(although "forget" probably still makes more sense) The way "miss" makes sense is via metaphorical reference to a task where spots could be "missed" such as cleaning a floor "You missed a spot over there" you didn't forget it so much as fail to complete the task because some portion of the task was skipped.
Another acceptable usage would be:




Fed Ex shipments must be received by 2PM. Please don't miss that
deadline when you drop the laptop off.







share|improve this answer




















  • This is the correct answer. That the fully incorrect answer has 45 votes is just one of those strange things about ELU !!
    – Fattie
    Aug 30 at 15:40












up vote
6
down vote










up vote
6
down vote









Miss doesn't really work as it was used in your question. The only way I can think it could work is if you're referring to a complicated task with multiple sub-tasks.




When returning your laptop please do the following.



  • Remove work data

  • Uninstall un-approved applications

  • Change password

  • Mail back to home office

Please don't miss any of the above steps because they are all
important.




(although "forget" probably still makes more sense) The way "miss" makes sense is via metaphorical reference to a task where spots could be "missed" such as cleaning a floor "You missed a spot over there" you didn't forget it so much as fail to complete the task because some portion of the task was skipped.
Another acceptable usage would be:




Fed Ex shipments must be received by 2PM. Please don't miss that
deadline when you drop the laptop off.







share|improve this answer












Miss doesn't really work as it was used in your question. The only way I can think it could work is if you're referring to a complicated task with multiple sub-tasks.




When returning your laptop please do the following.



  • Remove work data

  • Uninstall un-approved applications

  • Change password

  • Mail back to home office

Please don't miss any of the above steps because they are all
important.




(although "forget" probably still makes more sense) The way "miss" makes sense is via metaphorical reference to a task where spots could be "missed" such as cleaning a floor "You missed a spot over there" you didn't forget it so much as fail to complete the task because some portion of the task was skipped.
Another acceptable usage would be:




Fed Ex shipments must be received by 2PM. Please don't miss that
deadline when you drop the laptop off.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 29 at 21:56









jorfus

35114




35114











  • This is the correct answer. That the fully incorrect answer has 45 votes is just one of those strange things about ELU !!
    – Fattie
    Aug 30 at 15:40
















  • This is the correct answer. That the fully incorrect answer has 45 votes is just one of those strange things about ELU !!
    – Fattie
    Aug 30 at 15:40















This is the correct answer. That the fully incorrect answer has 45 votes is just one of those strange things about ELU !!
– Fattie
Aug 30 at 15:40




This is the correct answer. That the fully incorrect answer has 45 votes is just one of those strange things about ELU !!
– Fattie
Aug 30 at 15:40










up vote
-1
down vote













Wherefore dost thou thinketh this construction shalt not be used?
It is not wrong, per se. But it is not considered a modern usage of the language.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Aug 29 at 21:11














up vote
-1
down vote













Wherefore dost thou thinketh this construction shalt not be used?
It is not wrong, per se. But it is not considered a modern usage of the language.






share|improve this answer
















  • 2




    Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Aug 29 at 21:11












up vote
-1
down vote










up vote
-1
down vote









Wherefore dost thou thinketh this construction shalt not be used?
It is not wrong, per se. But it is not considered a modern usage of the language.






share|improve this answer












Wherefore dost thou thinketh this construction shalt not be used?
It is not wrong, per se. But it is not considered a modern usage of the language.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Aug 29 at 20:46









user314278

21




21







  • 2




    Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Aug 29 at 21:11












  • 2




    Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
    – Roger Sinasohn
    Aug 29 at 21:11







2




2




Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
– Roger Sinasohn
Aug 29 at 21:11




Welcome to English Language & Usage. We like to see answers with solid explanations and authoritative references. Perhaps you could edit your answer to provide more detail and some links to support it? Also, you might want to take the site tour and read through the help center.
– Roger Sinasohn
Aug 29 at 21:11

















 

draft saved


draft discarded















































 


draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fenglish.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f462202%2fcan-you-use-miss-instead-of-forget%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest













































































Popular posts from this blog

How to check contact read email or not when send email to Individual?

Displaying single band from multi-band raster using QGIS

How many registers does an x86_64 CPU actually have?