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Hi,
How do I start a letter for a customer that declined so I can get updated information or to inform them that they are cancelled and will countiue to be so if I do not get the information without sounding rude or harsh?
Sorry, I
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How do I start a letter for a customer that declined so I can get updated information or to inform them that they are cancelled and will countiue to be so if I do not get the information without sounding rude or harsh?
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Hi,
how do i start a letter of introduction for school
I'm not familiar with this kind of letter.
Why do you need it?
Who do you want to introduce? Yourself? Your child?
What kind of school is it? Elementary? University?
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how do i start a letter of introduction for school
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Wetmartini, I don't know if you received any further comments on your letter. I agree your draft of the letter was much improved over the original. I don't know who your audience of selected experts would be, however. Is English their
ESL, Business and Finance English
by
anonymous
100 days ago
Invitations, Spelling, Writing, Letters, Languages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Mistakes, United States, Invitation Letter, Asia, Korea, Starting
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Are you referring to the set phrase in the salutation of very impersonal, formal letters? "To whom it may concern:"
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What is the correct letter heading is it whom or whomever
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'Esquire' is long out of fashion, but if you use it and therefore have the recipient's surname, you do not use 'Dear Sir'-- use the name. Use 'Sir' when you do not have the name. British business usage still recommends 'faithfully' with 'Sir' and
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J. Smith, esq., - Dear Sir - Yours faithfully
or
Mr J. Smith / Mr John Smith - Dear Mr Smith / Dear John - Yours sincerely.
The first example is very formal and seems to be rarely used these days.
Hope this helps.
Simon
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Both are fine, but Yours faithfully is safer. Note that the second word should be lower case.
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