you can if you want but it is a grammatical error and would make you look silly.
After. Dear Fred, Re: your last letter...
After "Dear Billy," it is common to use a comma before continuing with the rest of the message. This punctuation helps separate the greeting from the main body of the text.
Assuming you mean a woman with the title "Lady". On the envelope put "Lady Jane Doe" before the location address. For the salutation in the letter use "Dear Madam" or "Dear Lady Jane" If you are talking about a woman who holds a position of power (e.g President) Use "President Jane Doe" on the envelope. "Dear Madam President" in the salutation If you mean any woman, use Miss or Mrs. before her name on the envelope if you know her marital status, Ms. if don't (or if this is her preference). The salutation should be "Dear Miss/Mrs./Ms. Smith" if the letter is formal, "Dear Jane" if a friendly letter to someone with whom you are on a first name basis.
My pet fawn was a very dear deer, to me.
she dear
It is not recommended that a writer use "Dear Gentlemen's" in a salutation. "Dear gentlemen's" is referring to the gentlemen's object, not the men themselves. Try using "Dear gentlemen" instead.
yes.
"Hi" or "Mr./Miss. Name" can be used instead of dear.
It seems only if your familiar, as 'dear' is a familiar term.
If you know their name, then use sincerely. If you don't then use faithfully. Thus Dear Mr Bloggs - Yours Sincerely Dear Sir - Yours Faithfully
In the NIV, twice he calls his mother "dear woman." But not in the King James Bible.
You would normally capitalize nouns in the salutation, Dear Residents: (but this is not a significant aspect of the letter and is often ignored). If you use a longer salutation, such as "My dear Neighbors," the word dear would not be capitalized.