The question is somewhat unclear.
If you GAVE a deposition, it probably is a copy of the deposition that you gave.
You were sworn to tell the truth before you gave it. Therefore, what now appears on the document you were sent amounts to your sworn testimony for which you can be held in contempt or charged with perjury if you now recant it.
If it was somebody else's deposition it may have simply been sent to you FYI.
Added: Some jurisdictions have a practice that the parties may opt into where a deponent has the opportunity to review the transcript of the deposition and correct any errors before the transcript becomes official. Any corrections would be supplied to the end of the transcript on an "errata" sheet.
The correct term for reverse sublimation is deposition. Deposition is the process where a substance transitions directly from a gas to a solid without passing through the liquid phase.
yes it is
It will NOT be returned to the sender that is for sure if it does not have a correct return address on the mailed envelope and the one that it was mailed to has a incorrect address or does NOT accept the mailed envelope.
deposition
Yes you do need to make sure that you put the correct amount of postage on the envelope because the IRS will get your mailed income tax return without the correct postage. And also make sure that you have the correct IRS mailing address on the envelope that your return is supposed to be mailed to.
yes
Have you confirmed if the check was sent to the correct address?
The correct order of water eroding soil is detachment, transport, deposition. Detachment involves the breaking up of soil particles, transport involves the movement of the particles by water, and deposition is when the particles settle in a new location.
Deposition creates landforms such as alluvial fans and deltas.It can also add soil to a river.Hope this helps.
The correct prefix to add to "fashionable" is "un-", resulting in "unfashionable."
When you put together unequal groups you only add. Is he correct?
deposition Added: Correct. But a deposition can be used in only very limited circumstances and is open to challenge by the opposing side which will force a ruling by the judge on its admissability.