We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
I am going to draft a Request letter for disconnection of telephone service please check and improve: Date Address of Tel company Attn: Subject: Request for Disconnection of Telephone Services/Connection To whom it may concern, Greetings! I would
-
Look in any grammar book or book about business English--they should have sample letters. These letters will give you the general form for a letter: DATE NAME OF PERSON HIS ADDRESS GREETING BODY OF LETTER THE COMPLIMENTARY CLOSE YOUR
-
Hi guys,
I have written a letter of motivation, but I'm not sure, wheater everything is correct or not.
I don't want to post the letter online, because consequently everybody could find it via Google. I would appreciate it, if
-
Hi,
Actually, when you are writing a formal letter never use a comma after addressing who the letter is to. The proper puncuation is a colon (:), not a comma. I see nothing at all wrong with a comma.
Example "Dear whom it may
-
What other options are there other than "Dear .. " ( Hello ) when writing a letter to a client even though you want it to be friendly ?
-
Hi,
As a salutation in a letter, which words are capatalized? Wikepedia has each first letter capitalized, but I'm not sure if that is correct.
First, let me comment that these words are only used if you are writing a very general
-
Please read through this thread and select a letter format with proper salutation and closing.
-
hi, what's the difference between - all the best - cheers - best wishes - yours sincerely (which is more formal) do they really mean different things or are they just different for the sake of formality? thanks
-
Are you referring to the set phrase in the salutation of very impersonal, formal letters? "To whom it may concern:"
-
The strict and primarily BrE usage is that 'sincerely' is used when the recipient's name appears in the greeting ('Dear Mr Smythe') and 'faithfully' is used when the recipient's name is unknown ('Dear Sir'). In AmE, the distinction is little
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|