0
Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

To: Mr. John Doe and From, XXX

Hi. Could we write a letter or perhaps a note or a short notes, pointing out whom it is addressed to by writing "To: Mr. John Doe" and end it by writing "From, your friend, XXX"? Let us say the letters represent his or her signature.

Should the latter part be in separate lines, top to bottom, like this?

From,
Your friend,
XXX

Also, would it be wrong to use this style of writing to write someting on a birthday card? Thank you in advance.
  

Top answer

Well, if you are friends, using 'Mr' seems inappropriate. A birthday card greeting is a very informal kind of message, but it generally reads like this: John, HAPPY BIRTHDAY! (further message) Your friend, Sally

  • Well, if you are friends, using 'Mr' seems inappropriate.
  • A birthday card greeting is a very informal kind of message, but it generally reads like this: John, HAPPY BIRTHDAY!
  • (further message) Your friend, Sally
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
Well, if you are friends, using 'Mr' seems inappropriate. A birthday card greeting is a very informal kind of message, but it generally reads like this:

John,

HAPPY BIRTHDAY! (further message)

Your friend,
Sally

Related Questions