The appropriate salutation for a business letter to Dr. Ben Corliss would be "Dear Dr. Corliss." It is essential to use the appropriate title and last name when addressing a professional in a business setting. This salutation shows respect and acknowledges Dr. Corliss's professional title.
Dear Doctor Ben Corliss
A comma. ' Dear Sir, ' or ' Dear Madam, ' or ' Messrs., ' (A fullsto/period, and a comma, because this is a shortened word for 'Messieurs' . It is pronounced as 'messers'. It is used when the written communication is for several gentlemen to read. NOT 'Dear Messrs'. Shortened words in the English language are followed by a fullstop/period, e.g. Mr. , then the comma as in other salutations. You can drop the 'Dear' and just write 'Sir, or 'Madam,' etc., but it is seen as very formal. If you write the King Charles(III) it is not 'Dear King (Charles),' , but ' Your Majesty, ' Neither 'dears' nor 'names' .
Dear Mr. President is a salutation of a business letter. The salutation goes at the beginning, thus that's how you got Dear.
In a business letter =P
salutation
Before the body
salutation
A salutation is an addressing to the person that the letter is addressed to and in a business letter you should always start with "Dear" and then add something like "Sir" or "Madam" immediately after it.
A business letter's salutation should be followed by a colon. For example, "Dear Mr. Smith:" or "To Whom It May Concern:".
vmrs
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D. All the above