Yes you can end a letter with
Yours Gratefully,
Name Surname
Its an old stlye ending - like the 1950s. Nowadays the two used are
Yours Sincerely, and Yours Faithfully, but its all good :D
in a formal letter in the end. The British system clearly defines when to use Yours Sincerely. That is when you start the letter with the name of the recipient. If the letter is started Dear Sir, the letter is concluded by using the words Yours faithfully
sincerely, respectfully, yours truly
Usually, we end the letter with "Yours", "Yours Sincerely", "Love", "All the Best", "Good Luck", "Yours always", etc. We barely end it with "Very best". You can end it with "very best" when you are talking to your friend or somebody casual, but when you are being formal, the best ones to use are "Yours Sincerely" or "Thank You".
"Since I had never gotten a dress before, I gratefully accepted the dress from my parents."
You never use this saying. If it's a letter to a good friend or a person you are romantically involved with you could put 'forever yours.' When it's an impersonal or business letter you can sign the letter in the most popular manner with is 'Yours truly,' but some people will also use 'Sincerely yours.'The first part of this answer no doubt reflects US usage. In UK "Yours ever" is a formula used by some to end a letter to an acquaintance who is a good friend. Like all these formulas to begin or end a letter, it is a phatic phrase which is not meant to be interpreted literally; for example, "Dear Mr Smith" is not meant to imply that Mr Smith is especially dear to you. Where "Yours ever" might be considered too familiar, the usual practice in UK is to write "Yours sincerely", rather than "Sincerely yours", once again this is not an expression to be taken literally, it is just a formula of language.
use yours truly to be on the safe side
You typically use "Yours sincerely" at the end of a letter when you know the recipient's name and have a formal or professional relationship with them. It is a common sign-off for business letters, cover letters, or other formal communications.
It is more common to use "Yours sincerely" at the end of a fan letter, as it is seen as a warmer and more personal sign-off compared to "Yours faithfully."
The Business Writing blog offers lots of helpful hints on how to use business greetings correctly. One of the best things to remember is that if you start a letter with Dear Sir or Madam, it should end with Yours faithfully. Whereas if you know their name then the letter should end with Yours sincerely.
If the letter is angry, use something like this: With regrets, From, I hope to speak with you soon, If the letter is civil, use something like this: Regards, Yours, Thanks for listening....
yes
Cordially: (cordial) 1. Warm and sincere 2. Strongly felt; fervent 3. Serving to invigorate; stimulating.Now that we've gotten past the definition, I see nothing wrong with using the phrase "cordially yours" or "yours cordially". Although it is not as common as it used to be years ago.There are several different "politically correct" views on how to use "yours truly", "truly yours", "yours sincerely", "sincerely yours", "yours cordially", "cordially yours" etc, depending on the type of letter. A business letter, a personal letter, etc.My personal taste is when writing a business letter or professional letter, I use "sincerely" that's it. I'm not sincerely theirs, etc, however, I'm sincere with my letter, so I feel that ending my letters with "Sincerely" will suffice.When I'm writing a personal letter, well, it's personal, so to end with such a drab closing just doesn't suit me. So I personally end each of my letters different depending on the person I'm writing.So, to use Cordially, you would definitely have to have the "yours" somewhere in there, but I see nothing wrong with it, I actually like the nostalgic feel to it, so knock yourself out.Cordially Yours :) (LOL)