Yes I am 90% sure that you do, you put yours faithfully if you dont
Thanks hope i helped
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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
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 the name of the person you are writing to:for example, Dear Mrs. Smith....Yours sincerely... If you don't know the name of the person to whom you are writing yo begin Dear Sir/Madam....Yours faithfully...
You typically use "Yours sincerely" at the end of a letter when you know the recipient's name and have a formal or professional relationship with them. It is a common sign-off for business letters, cover letters, or other formal communications.
After the word "sincerely," you would typically use a comma to separate the closing of the letter from your name. For example, "Sincerely, John Smith."
yeah or you can put truly maybe sincerely i mean if you dont know them you can still pt it it really wont matter
Of course you have to sincerely apologise to the one that you love. Make sure that you know what you have done wrong and make it up to her/him. This way, the person you love will know that you meant what you say and forgives you. All the best to you.
You use 'Your's Sincerely' with somebody you do not yet know. For example if you are applying for a job you would use 'Sincerely'. You use 'Your's Faithfully' with somebody you do know. For example if you are talking to your employer you would use 'Faithfully' as you already have a relationship in which there is an element of faith in each other.
It's SINCERELY. Here are some sentences.You sign a letter "sincerely yours."He apologized sincerely for his remark.I sincerely hope that you will try to do your own homework.
In a business letter it shoulf be faithfully, in a person letter - sincerely.
In a somewhat formal letter, you should put "yours sincerely" (if you know the person you are adressing by name) or "yours faithfully" (if you don't). If you know the person you are writing well, you can end with "best regards".
The word "sincerely" or the word pair "sincerely yours" is used in the closing, which comes immediately before the signature on a letter.