Dear Madam ________,
Unfortauntely, we don't know the address of your land lady. However, If you're trying to address a letter to your land lady you'd just address her as Ms. or Mrs. depending on if she married or not.
dear first lady,
In the address line: The Right Honourable the Countess of (whichever district she is Countess of) In the letter body: Madam or Dear Lady (name of her district)
a lady is any female that is elegant and is repected more the most part, she doesnt have to be an adult, any female. a women is usually an female adult, not really respected but can be.
You can address them as 'Sir' if they are a man, ' Miss' if you do not know if the lady is married or not, 'Madam' if you know the lady is married. If you are writing a letter, and you do not know the gender, you can address him/her as 'Dear Sir/Madam'. If you do not want to use any of the above, you may use 'excuse me'. Hope this answers your question :)
treaty 6 was honored and repected for people
When addressing a letter to a Sir and a Lady together, you should use the format "Sir [First Name] [Last Name] and Lady [First Name] [Last Name]." For example, if addressing Sir John Smith and Lady Jane Smith, you would write: "Sir John Smith and Lady Jane Smith." In the salutation, you can start with "Dear Sir John and Lady Jane," or simply "Dear Sir and Lady Smith."
The answer is here: http://www.businesswritingblog.com/business_writing/2006/01/greetings_and_s.html Dear Mr. and Dr. Paige:
The French title, Mademoiselle means my young lady and is the proper way to address a young lady in French.
A Lady Writing a Letter was created in 1665.
You can address her by madam or ma'am.
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.