Mr Wilts, it seems Mr Mountford has cancelled the meeting, but he is very much looking forward to hearing about your upcoming trip to Portland, And that you have the authority to hire and fire, as you see fit " Looking forward to hearing from you" Finally, and most importantly, and this is what we are looking forward to hearing from the honourable Member, the report focuses on the consequences for Zimbabwe's futureA noun Obviously, "hear" is not a thing, so it wouldn't make much sense to "look forward to hear from you" The thing you are looking forward to is "hearing from you" correct I look forward to hearing from you wrong I look forward to hear from youSentence 1 and Sentence 2 are both correct Whether you say, "I look forward" or "I am looking forward," they mean the same "I look forward" is a little more formal, something you'd write in a letter of application, for example "I look forward to hea...