It is always considerate to apologize for any delay on response to email someone may be waiting for from you. "I am sorry for the delay" is a polite way to open your email correspondence.
If you are apologizing for the delay in your *reply*, then no. If you are apologizing for the delay to an e-mail caused by your mail provider, then possibly yes, but it should be "sorry for the delay *to* this e-mail" or similar.
I am having difficulty when replying from a mail received from a supplier it comes back to my mail with a message : mailer-daemon. How can I solve this?
If you mean the content of the mail, you can't. You can only edit a mail by forwarding or replying.
Sorry for the Delay was created on 2006-04-09.
Sorry for the delay, I answered the question in your original inquiry, please let me know if you have follow up questions
Forwarding is when you get sent an email and then you send it on to someone else. Replying is when you reply to a message.
He probably does but doesn't have the time to stay replying to every mail he receives.
"Why is no one replying to that mail?" by the way,it seems a Lebanese/Syrian accent.
Is she replying back
Sorry, I was not notified that you had responded. The answer to your last question is yes, those are the next steps. Very sorry for the delay.
replying to clear this
If you are quoting something in an e-mail (for example, the e-mail to which you are replying), but you quote only parts of it, you can put "snip" to show where a part was left out.