Yours Faithfully
1 Uknown recipient Dear Sir/Madam Yours faithfully 2 Known recipient Dear Mr/Mrs/Prof/Dr Yours sincerely
If you start Dear Mr Bloggs, you should sign off "Yours sincerely". If you start Dear Sir/Madam or Dear Customer, you should sign off "Yours faithfully".
head department of Chemistry STC College dollop Sir, I have the honour to inform you that my original identity card has unfortunately been lost. Because of the missing of the identity card, I am facing several inconveniences Yours faithfully
Due to some personal circumstance . i could not continue my Internet connection as mentioned above. I have paid full and final for ............. . now you are requested kindly disconnect my Internet connection as mention above with immediate effect. now I am not responsible for further billing of this Internet connection . Thanking you Your faithfully
Dear Sir (Sir is back in fashion) I am writing to acknowledge receipt of your invitation to the 'Totally Marvellous Hot Air Balloon Expo in Belgium, July 4, 2004. I regret that my schedule for July prevents me from accepting your invitation this year. I do hope that you may wish to keep me posted regarding future expositions. I enjoyed meeting Mr Richard Harris [get relevant information from your boss' diary if possible] on February 20 earlier this year and am very grateful to him for remembering my interest in the expo. Yours faithfully Mayuree washilkar [your boss' name]
I am faithfully yours.
faithfully
Yours Faithfully was created on 1998-03-31.
If you know the name of the person to whom the letter is addressed, then you may use: "Yours sincerely". If you do not know the name, or you are writing to an organisation, then the "Yours faithfully" salutation is the correct form of address.
If you know their name, then use sincerely. If you don't then use faithfully. Thus Dear Mr Bloggs - Yours Sincerely Dear Sir - Yours Faithfully
yours faithfully
You have spelled it correctly in your question !
yours faithfully
The correct spelling is "faithfully" (in a loyal manner).
use yours truly to be on the safe side
Comparative: more faithfully Superlative: most faithfully
Yes indeed, yours faithfully Mikey..