Dear Mr. Smith and Mr. Jones or Dear Sirs as an example
Date Mr. Harold Happy, Jr. street address city, st zip Dear Harold, OR Date Mr. Harold Happy, Jr. street address city, st zip Dear Mr. Happy, - - -
When addressing a letter, there are a number of acceptable variations, including but not limited to: Addressing two men: Gentlemen (without dear); Dear Messrs. Smith and Jones; Dear Mr. Smith and Dr. Jones; Dear Prof. Smith and Mr. Jones. Addressing two women: Mesdames or Ladies (without dear); Dear Mses. Smith and Jones; Dear Prof. Smith and Ms. Jones; Dear Ms. Smith and Rev. Jones. Addressing a man and a woman: Dear Sir and Madam; Dear Mr. Smith and Dr. Jones; Dear Prof. Smith and Ms. Jones. Addressing a group of unknown or mixed gender: Gentlemen and Ladies (without dear). Source: The Gregg Reference Manual, Sixth Edition
If a man is married to a man, then each is the husband of the other. If a woman is married to a woman, then each is the wife of the other. Their relationship is called a marriage and they are a married couple. In correspondence, the appropriate form of address depends upon whether they have the same surname or not. Some examples are: Two men: Dear Mr. Smith and Mr. Jones Dear Messrs. Smith and Jones Dear Messrs. Johnson Two women: Dear Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Jones Dear Mesdames Smith and Jones Dear Mesdames Johnson
Yes, that's correct.
The salutation is a from of greeting: Dear Mr. Smith: Dear Ms. Brown: Dear Professor Green: Dear Doctor Jones: Dear Professor Green and Ms. Brown: Dear Doctors Jones and Jacob: Dear Sir: Dear Madam: Dear Sir/Madam: Gentlemen: Ladies: Gentlemen and Ladies: To Whom It May Concern:
the correct answer is led, The class will be LED by Mr Jones OR Mr Jones will LEAD the class
For addressing a letter, it should be: Mr. John Smith & Mr. Jim Jones Susan & Diane Black-Stein -or- The Smith-Jones Family An older tradition allows for: Messrs. Smith and Jones; Messrs. Smith (if they both have the same last name); Mesdames Black and Stein; and, Mesdames Black-Stein (if they share a hyphenated last name).
They are two people - two is plural, so it should be "Where are Mr and Mrs Jones?"
The correct way to say the sentence is, "Mr. Jones and he ran the fair."
The plural form of Mr Jones is Messrs Jones.
Dear Sirs or Sirs "Mr. and Mr." appear to be plural. In that case the term is "Messrs." Otherwise you can say "Mr. X and Mr. Y."