Dear Sir.
If he is a magistrate or judge: Dear Honorable _____
Stephen Jordan Rigaud has written: 'Correspondence of scientific men of the seventeenth century'
J. A. Konrad has written: 'You don't have to be gay' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Gay men, Male Homosexuality, Masculinity
Some supplies used for written correspondence include paper, pens or pencils, envelopes, stamps, and address labels. Other optional supplies can include notecards, letterhead stationery, and sealing wax.
Arthur Motyer has written: 'The Staircase Letters' -- subject- s -: Correspondence 'What's remembered' -- subject- s -: Fiction, Gay men
A correspondence address is any address you wish your mail to be sent too.
Yes, it is appropriate to address someone with a PhD as "Dr." in email correspondence as a sign of respect for their academic achievement.
Yes, it is "correspondence@waste.uk.com".
Kathe Josefine Keimer has written: 'Commercial correspondence, English-German' -- subject(s): Commercial correspondence, German Commercial correspondence
Traditionally, "Mister (Mr)" was a title used to address married men, while "Master (Mstr)" was used to address unmarried men. Over time, the use of "Mister" expanded to include unmarried men, and "Master" became restricted to boys and young men who had not yet entered society. Even this is quite rare today, and is mostly used in extremely formal written correspondence.
Girindrashekhar Bose has written: 'Bose-Freud correspondence' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Psychoanalysts
John A. Smith has written: 'John A. Smith correspondence' -- subject(s): Correspondence, Property
Friedrich Tieck has written: 'A Weimar correspondence' -- subject(s): Correspondence, German Authors