In business letters the recipients of copies are listed under the main recipient and indicated by cc: (as in an e-mail)
In copy editing, it means to restore a delete, indicated by the word "stet."
The original. The copy is for your filing purposes and as a backup.
It is the rough copy that you do not intend to send.
The draft letter will be circulated prior to the release of the final copy.
Another word for copy that starts with an "R" could be reproduce. Hope that helps.
It stands for "carbon copy" (an old term, carbon paper is no longer used now that everyone has copy machines. It indicated that someone OTHER THAN the person addressed in the letter was going to be receiving a copy of the letter as well. So there would be a copy going to the person addressed (Dear Mr. Jones), a copy kept for the person who wrote the letter in the first place, and a copy of the letter to everyone whose name appears under "cc".
Mr. T. E. Jones could be part of any of several parts of a business letter:The inside address and salutation (greeting); the person that the letter is going to (the addressee).The subject of the letter; a name on the reference line or included in the body of the letter.The signature; the name of the person that the letter is from.The 'copy' line; a person who will receive a copy of the letter in addition to the addressee.
Permission to get a copy has to be given to you by the person that made the will. If that person is already dead, you can go to the lawyer that drew them up to begin with.
The copy reference at the end of a letter is a list of who, in addition to the addressee, will receive a copy of the letter. The standard 'copy' notation was 'Cc' or 'cc', standing for 'carbon copy'. However, since carbon paper is no longer used to make copies, the notation can read 'Copy:' or 'Copies:'.
The copy reference at the end of a letter is a list of who, in addition to the addressee, will receive a copy of the letter. The standard 'copy' notation was 'Cc' or 'cc', standing for 'carbon copy'. However, since carbon paper is no longer used to make copies, the notation can read 'Copy:' or 'Copies:'
The copy reference at the end of a letter is a list of who, in addition to the addressee, will receive a copy of the letter. The standard 'copy' notation was 'Cc' or 'cc', standing for 'carbon copy'. However, since carbon paper is no longer used to make copies, the notation can read 'Copy:' or 'Copies:'
You can do that by sending a CC to the person. CC stands for carbon copy of mail. A person receiving a CC is only able to receive the copy of the mail.
Carbon Copy.... if you type an email address in that line, that person will receive a copy of the email you are sending. BCC is Blind Carbon Copy meaning that if you type an address in the BCC line, that person will receive a copy of the email you are sending but their email address will not show to the others who received the email.
"carbon copy" it means a copy of the letter was sent to someone other than the person it was addressed to.
The letters cc in relation to emails (or letters) mean Carbon Copy. It indicates that, not only will the recipient receive the email/letter but another person (or persons) will also get a copy.
indicates that a copy of a letter is to be sent to someone without disclosing it to the addressee of the letter. when used, bc and the name of the person receiving the blind copy are keyed at the left margin a DS below the last letter part on all copies of the letter except the original.
It is where you can send a copy of your letter to another person without them knowing you sent a copy of your letter to someone else. It means Blind carbon copy....Hidden from others receiving the same E-mail.