Yes, and then start a new paragraph; preferably double-space.
Because he had suffered a severe systematic infection caused by a pressure wound which put him into a coma causing his death.
Pink
They were arguing over her friends, namely Paige, and he was shaking her, knocked her down and she hit her head on one of the cinder blocks laying around.
no Benjamin Banneker was nice and put it in an unharmful way but Thomas Jefferson was mean back to him because he was an African American
The plot of sleeping beauty involves a young woman, who meets seven dwarves, she lives with them for a while, talks with them, and then one day an old woman calls her out of the house, she then offers her an apple, it causes her to be put into a coma, a brave night learns of this and fights her way to where the witch is keeping the young girl, breaks the magic coma spell by kissing her and they live happily ever after... at least that's what we think.
Yes, a comma is used after the salutation in a formal letter. For example, "Dear Mr. Smith,".
yes u do you put it like this Dear teacher, then u carry on with your letter
Assuming you mean a woman with the title "Lady". On the envelope put "Lady Jane Doe" before the location address. For the salutation in the letter use "Dear Madam" or "Dear Lady Jane" If you are talking about a woman who holds a position of power (e.g President) Use "President Jane Doe" on the envelope. "Dear Madam President" in the salutation If you mean any woman, use Miss or Mrs. before her name on the envelope if you know her marital status, Ms. if don't (or if this is her preference). The salutation should be "Dear Miss/Mrs./Ms. Smith" if the letter is formal, "Dear Jane" if a friendly letter to someone with whom you are on a first name basis.
I think it means you were put into a coma by the doctor.
Write 'Dear Mr xxx or Dear M/r/s xxx'. If you don't know the name, put in the address 'For the attention of the xxxxxxxxxxxx' (whatever the job title or office is) and then 'Dear Sir or Madam'. Try to find out the name though, because people always prefer it.
It depends on why the infant is in a coma. there a several illnesses that can put someone in a coma.
Governor. If it was a previous governor you would simply say former Governor.
In the upper left side of the email/letter you would write: The Honorable John (or Jane) Smith, and beneath that is where you would put their address. The salutation should be "Dear Senator Smith", and the closing should be "Sincerely, John Doe" Example: * The Honorable John Smith * ABC Street * Any town, Any state, 12345 Dear Senator Smith, Sincerely, Your name
The Honorable Firstname Surname Dear Mr./Ms. Surname, Sincerely yours, http://www.librarycat.org/SVLS/html/lawmakers/correct_form.html Do address to "The Honorable" but Do NOT put Mr. or Ms. (and certainly not Mrs.) on the salutation after Dear when addressing someone who has been voted to the US Senate or House of Representatives. Use their title, such as Senator, Congressman/Congresswoman or Representative followed by their last name. http://www.ita.doc.gov/ita_sec/Address%20and%20Salutation.htm
He was put into a coma to allow his body to heal.
They are purposefully put in a coma through some anesthetic drug. It is only temporary, but it's done to put the brain in a hibernating state to recover.
my dear means that like my baby sweetie you see i am really sweet with you PUT just people who are married can say that or who are together thank you for asking