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Writing a letter to a women



1

1066gull

Guest
You know the name, but dont no them, if they are married etc.

for example, you no her as Jane Smith

do you write 'dear mrs smith' or 'dear miss smith' or 'dear ms smith'?
 




1

1066gull

Guest
or sir/madam with their name on the envelope?
 










The Large One

Who's Next?
Jul 7, 2003
52,343
97.2FM
It depends.

Is it a formal or informal letter? It also depends on the nature of the letter. If you don't know them, it sounds like it's a formal letter.

Whatever way you do it, may I suggest learning to spell before you write this letter?
 




Wardy

NSC's Benefits Guru
Oct 9, 2003
11,219
In front of the PC
Depends on the reason for the letter. Though the general rule is that if you KNOW the persons name then you address it to them. For example Mrs Smith. Glad to see that the education system is still working well.
 




Bevendean Hillbilly

New member
Sep 4, 2006
12,805
Nestling in green nowhere
Just send a lock of pubic hair in a plain envelope.

Its much more personal and mysterious.
 
















Boris Yeltsin

MR PRESIDENT to you, mate
Feb 13, 2008
491
Moscow
Handy hints:

When the recipient's name is unknown to you:
Dear Sir ... Yours faithfully
Dear Madam ... Yours faithfully
Dear Sir or Madam ... Yours faithfully

When you know the recipient's name:
Dear Mr Smith... Yours sincerely
Dear Mrs Smith ... Yours sincerely
Dear Miss Smith ... Yours sincerely
Dear Ms Smith... Yours sincerely
 




British Bulldog

The great escape
Feb 6, 2006
10,966
You know the name, but dont no them, if they are married etc.

for example, you no her as Jane Smith

do you write 'dear mrs smith' or 'dear miss smith' or 'dear ms smith'?

Just start the letter " oi wench " and that should cover it.
 






Buzzer

Languidly Clinical
Oct 1, 2006
26,121
just crib from one that's already been used with a lot of success:




Dear madam

f*** off you mess.

Yours faithfully

A certain NSC poster
 


Feb 2, 2007
1,694
Japan
It depends.

Is it a formal or informal letter? It also depends on the nature of the letter. If you don't know them, it sounds like it's a formal letter.

Whatever way you do it, may I suggest learning to spell before you write this letter?

:D:D:D:D
 


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