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The ShahrukhFit Posted 7 years ago
Grammar

Punctuation Marks in The Beginning of a Formal Letter

"Dear Samantha and your kids, John, Kelly, Hannah
I would like to invite you all to visit........"

In this invitation letter Samantha is being invited with her kids John Kelly and Hannah.
I want to write the the underlined sentence with correct grammar and in a formal way.
Please guide me. I am confused in using comma after kids and then mentioning their names.
What would be the correct way of writing this with respect to writing "your kids" and then mentioning their names.
Thanks

  

Top answer

Quote Just write it this way. Samantha knows they are her kids, so you don't need to tell her. Dear Samantha.

  • Quote Just write it this way.
  • Samantha knows they are her kids, so you don't need to tell her.
  • Dear Samantha.
  • John, Kelly and Hannah, I would like to invite you all to visit........
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2 Answers
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Quote

Just write it this way.

Samantha knows they are her kids, so you don't need to tell her. Emotion: wink

Dear Samantha

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I was hoping to mention kids and their names at the starting of the letter without starting it on a different paragraph. Why? What I suggested was the standard, common and natural approach.


If you want to write it this way, go ahead. The officials will understand your meaning.

"Dear Samantha and your children kids

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