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Is this sentence OK?

And send a message if you would like to work with.

I don't want to make it clear if the cooperation is with one person or a team.

I could say "to work with us" or "to work with me", but I want to sound neutral and "mysterious"if you want ;)

I can say it in my language, but I am not sure about English.

How could I rewrite it in English if the sentence above is not correct?

Thank you in advance

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You can't just remove the complement of a preposition and expect the rest to be grammatical. What does the preposition refer to? Nothing, so you must kick it out as well. Of course what's left is then too broad ("...if you would like to work.") Why not use the word you just used yourself, cooperate? "... if you would like to cooperate." – RegDwighт Jul 25 '12 at 9:31
Ok, so "And send a message if you would like to cooperate." is correct? – Derfder Jul 25 '12 at 9:35

closed as too localized by RegDwighт Jul 25 '12 at 9:29

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