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Lrk2006 Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Dear The Concerned,

I just wanted to write an email message to an educational institute.

I didn't know who would read my mail. A male/female might read that. I gave the title as then,

Dear The Concerned,

Did i do something wrong? because the dictionary shows the meaning as:


con-cerned (kn-surnd)

adj. 1. Interested and involved: sent a memorandum to those concerned. 2. Anxious; troubled: the concerned parents of youthful offenders.

with the synonyms:


Showing or feeling nervous tension. adj.excitable, high-strung, highly strung, concerned, uneasy, unsettled, restless, ill at ease, worried, nervous, perturbed, fidgety, jumpy, nervy, edgy, on edge, jittery, tense, anxious, on tenterhooks, worked up, uptight, shook up, all shook up.

God Save Me!!!!!

  

Top answer

The standard form for letters, when you don't know the identity of the person who will be reading it, is: To whom it may concern : another possibility is Dear Sir or Madam: I'm pretty sure that the readers of your email will recognize that you were attempting something like "To whom it may concern" and didn't get it exactly right. )

  • The standard form for letters, when you don't know the identity of the person who will be reading it, is: To whom it may concern : another possibility is Dear Sir or Madam: I'm pretty sure that the readers of your email will recognize that you were attempting something like "To whom it may concern" and didn't get it exactly right.
  • )
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1 Answers
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The standard form for letters, when you don't know the identity of the person who will be reading it, is:

To whom it may concern:

another possibility is

Dear Sir or Madam:

I'm pretty sure that the readers of your email will recognize that you were attempting something like "To whom it may concern" and didn't get it exactly right. (They will not a

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