You have to use the term Ms. because you don't know their marital status. The rest depends on other aspect of the situation. If there were only two of them, you would have to say Ms. Jones and Ms. Smith. If there were several of them you might get away with writing only to one of them, presuneably the most senior as herself or as Ms Smith et al. st al is Latin for "and others". If the stuation is such that none of these are appropriate than you have to address each of them individually, Dear Ms. Smith, and Ms. Jones, and Ms. Jackson, ets.
Ms.
The proper prefix would be "Ms." "Miss" is for unmarried women. "Mrs." is used for married women. "Ms." is used when marital status is unknown or when the woman does not disclose it intentionally.
The phrase "to whom it may concern" is known as a salutation or a formal greeting used at the beginning of a letter or email when the recipient is unknown.
"Dear Sir or Madam" or "To whom it may concern" when you aren't sure of the recipient's name.
"Dear Sir or Madam" or "To whom it may concern" when you aren't sure of the recipient's name.
Ms. [her name] ex. Dear Ms. Corningstone:
Nowadays, addressing a woman as "Ms" is considered acceptable.
There are Approx. 8,000 nesting females left
no there are multiple of each one BUT... the ? and the ! unown there are only one of those
Yes. Some alien races have multiple heads. But currently, it is unknown.
Yes. Some alien races have multiple hearts. But currently, it is unknown.
Yes. Some alien races have multiple legs. But currently, it is unknown.