Postmark gives three things: date, time, and place mailed.
One must take the to-be mailed item to a post-office for its weight - it is the weight of an item that will determine the postage (or the amount of stamps to be placed). What does one do, if they have a scale and wishes to avoid going to the post office?
Are you talking about email or mail sent with the US Post Office?
you go to the post shop and tell them where you want to post it to.
There should be red marking on the front of the envelope called a postmark, it should name the city & state of the mail processing center the letter was sent from. This is not necessarily where it was mailed from, just where it was processed.
That will depend on where in the world you are. Go to your local post office and they will tell you the current prices to send letters to Ireland.
your post office will weigh the letter and tell you the exact amount, they will then sell you the appropriate stamps, put them on your letter and mail it.
A Mark in a bone can tell many things. It can tell of a trama, a broken bone, a cut, scrape. an mark can tell a story
Go to the post office, tell them you want to send a registered letter, fill out the little card they give you, and pay the fee for sending it.
You need to go to US post office . I believe that registered mail is what you needed for international mail, but the post office will tell you what services are available.
That would depend on the weight of the letter. Postage is 42 cents per ounce, with each additional ounce requiring more postage. Your local post office can weigh it for you. Or if you have postal scales you can weigh it, then call your post office, tell them how much the letter weighs, and get them to tell you how much postage it will need.
you need to tell us where from! If it's England or Wales then just the same as you would use to post a letter to England.
tell me the post code of sharjah