Saying that the mail has an attached form filled up by me?

Let's say I'm writing a letter to a university and my mail has an application form attached to it. How can I say it in a more formal and concise way than "Please see the attached application form that I filled up." or "Please find attached my filled-up application form." I would appreciate it if the answer starts with "Please see. " or "Please find attached. " Thank you!

damat-perdigannat asked Nov 7, 2013 at 7:28 damat-perdigannat damat-perdigannat 205 2 2 gold badges 3 3 silver badges 8 8 bronze badges

". my completed application form." (As an aside: for forms, BrE uses filled in; AmE uses filled out. Baths are filled up.)

Commented Nov 7, 2013 at 7:37

Thanks Andrew! But, doesn't it sound like the application form is my possession and therefore not for them? This is why I'm hoping for a better rewording for "Please find attached my filled-up application form."

Commented Nov 7, 2013 at 7:42

"Please find attached my completed application form." You have attached it; it is in their possession. Even "Please see my completed application form" implies it's attached, or how could they see it? [I think find attached is better: it tells them explicitly where it is.]

Commented Nov 7, 2013 at 7:59

@bimboxX If the form isn't actually attached it is perfectly alright to say 'Please find enclosed (herewith) my completed application form.' 'Herewith' is not essential.