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Usenet Posted 21 years ago
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Our Prestige Customers,

I am hongkonger.
Sometimes, I recived bank letters used "Our Prestige Customers," instead of "Dear Sir / Madam,". Is it correct? If yes, Is it common in your city?
  

Top answer

[nq:1]I am hongkonger. Sometimes, I recived bank letters used "Our Prestige Customers," instead of "Dear Sir / Madam,". Is it correct?

  • [nq:1]I am hongkonger.
  • Sometimes, I recived bank letters used "Our Prestige Customers," instead of "Dear Sir / Madam,".
  • Is it correct?
  • [/nq] We don't have the notion of "correct" in this area.
  • It's correct if that's how the bank wants to address you.
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20 Answers
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[nq:1]I am hongkonger. Sometimes, I recived bank letters used "Our Prestige Customers," instead of "Dear Sir / Madam,". Is it correct? If yes, Is it common in your city?[/nq]
We don't have the notion of "correct" in this area. It's correct if that's how the bank wants to address you.
I live on the edge of a town in a rural English county, not a city, so I can't answer your second question.
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[nq:1]Sometimes, I recived bank letters used "Our Prestige Customers," insteadof "Dear Sir / Madam,". Is it correct? If yes, Is it common in your city?[/nq]
As an English form of address, this is wrong, i.e. is not one of the shared conventions:

1. Nearly all variants include "Dear" or someother such function, e.g. "To" as in "To whom
it may concern."

2. Variants of addre
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I know here in the United States, one variant in general letters to its customers might be "To Our Valued Customers". Sounds similar anyway.

Larry
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[nq:1]I am hongkonger. Sometimes, I recived bank letters used "Our Prestige Customers," insteadof "Dear Sir / Madam,". Is it correct?[/nq]
Not unless you're a member of the "Prestige Customer" programme.

Adrian
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"Larry G" ??:
[nq:2]of As an English form of address, this is wrong, ... addressee include Sir, Madam, Gentlemen, etc. but not "Prestige Customers."[/nq]
[nq:1]I know here in the United States, one variant in general letters to its customers might be "To Our Valued Customers". Sounds similar anyway. Larry[/nq]
In other words, "To Our Prestige Customers," might be acceptable.

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"Adrian Bailey" (Email Removed) ¼¶¼g©ó¶l¥ó·s»D:ycjre.4236$

Well, I wasn't a member of such programme and I found no such programme actually.
Clifford
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"the Omrud" (Email Removed)
??:
[nq:2]I am hongkonger. Sometimes, I recived bank letters used "Our ... it correct? If yes, Is it common in your city?[/nq]
[nq:1]We don't have the notion of "correct" in this area. It's correct if that's how the bank wants to address ... some scheme which will make the bank even richer than it already is. David == replace usenet with the[/nq]
For the
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Clifford filted:
[nq:1]In other words, "To Our Prestige Customers," might be acceptable.[/nq]
Not if you're e-mailing it to me...by my own choice, I'd be one of your "Lucida Console Customers"..r
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[nq:2]I know here in the United States, one variant in general letters to its customers might be "To Our Valued Customers". Sounds similar anyway.[/nq]
[nq:2]of As an English form of address, this is wrong, ... addressee include Sir, Madam, Gentlemen, etc. but not "Prestige Customers."[/nq]
[nq:1]I know here in the United States, one variant in general letters to its customers might be "To
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[nq:2]We don't have the notion of "correct" in this area. ... will make the bank even richer than it already is.[/nq]
[nq:1]For the second question, I just want to know the differenct between Chinese culture and your cutlure. Some Chinese prefer ... don't think that the bank was trying to flatter me in order to get me to do something they wanted.[/nq]
I think that most mail from a bank to

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