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15 answers

"Complements of" means somebody is giving you something or providing you with something. Alternate ways of phrasing: "Please take this pen with our compliments," or "This is free complimentary pen".

In a letter, you'd use "With best compliments from".

2006-06-06 06:37:52 · answer #1 · answered by Mantis 6 · 0 0

If you are giving someone a closing salutation or a free gift then say "compliments of" leave out the word best - it doesn't sound right.

2006-06-06 06:39:30 · answer #2 · answered by ouisy_01 3 · 0 0

I would use "compliments from" if it were from an individual person or people, and "compliments of" if it's more of a buisiness or entity. I wouldn't add " with best" at all.

2006-06-06 06:37:53 · answer #3 · answered by dmfitz00 4 · 0 0

The first one.

2006-06-06 06:37:04 · answer #4 · answered by Aria 4 · 0 0

d first 1 is right

2006-06-06 06:37:57 · answer #5 · answered by Romi 2 · 0 0

"Best" is awkward. Maybe "all compliments". And it's OF. This dessert is compliments OF (not from) the chef.

2006-06-07 12:25:42 · answer #6 · answered by Oghma Gem 6 · 0 0

If something is provided to you free of charge by someone else, you'd say "compliments of."

2006-06-06 06:35:44 · answer #7 · answered by cucumberlarry1 6 · 0 0

"With best compliments from"

2006-06-06 06:36:50 · answer #8 · answered by 3's 2 · 0 0

The 1st one sounds better,.....but not great.

Can u think of another way to word it?
not sure what you are referring to..so can't help w/ the wording.

2006-06-06 06:37:08 · answer #9 · answered by Paige 4 · 0 0

Of sounds better

2006-06-06 06:57:44 · answer #10 · answered by fifi 2 · 0 0

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