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I am not sure whether "for taking your time out for this" is correct? Basically I want to say thanks to a person who is spending his personal time to solve my problem at work. Kindly advise. Thank you!

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Question is out of scope for this site, see the faq: no 'Proofreading ("are there any mistakes?"), unless the source of concern is clearly specified'; no 'Writing advice or critique requests (see Writers.SE instead—note critique requests must meet their criteria)' – MετάEd Sep 7 '12 at 18:42
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It's a basic ESL question. @Saurabh Patil - the answer is you don't want the repeated "for", but in fact the normal phrasing would be something like Thanks for taking [the] time [out] to do this. Either or both the [bracketed] words are optional, and it makes no real difference to meaning what permutation you choose. Sometimes you might prefer "deal with this" over "do this". – FumbleFingers Sep 7 '12 at 20:18

closed as off topic by Cameron, MετάEd, FumbleFingers, RegDwighт Sep 9 '12 at 21:01

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1 Answer

There isn't really an idiom that covers this. Typically we thank people for their help when they are spending extra time on a problem we have. We only typically thank people for their time when we have asked them to a meeting or for the time they spend reading something we send to them.

To specifically acknowledge and give thanks for the time that their help takes rather than for the help in general, you can say,

Thank you for spending time on this.

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