The abbreviation "pp" stands for "per procurationem," which means "by proxy" and is used when someone is signing on behalf of another person. It typically appears before the signature. For example, it would be written as "pp [Name of the person being represented] [Signature of the proxy]."
pp ups are things that put you're Pokemon's pp up
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If you fart in a pp it will be crapy pp
The abbreviation "pp" stands for "per procurationem," which means "by proxy" and is used when someone is signing on behalf of another person. It typically appears before the signature. For example, it would be written as "pp [Name of the person being represented] [Signature of the proxy]."
Per procurationem (by proxy)
Signature.
You sign your name as you can't be "on behalf of" if you sign someone elses name! But the 'pp' precedes the person you are signing for. For example: Yours sincerely Your signature pp Name of person signed for Yes, you sing your name. But the pp precedes your signature, not the name of the person you are signing on behalf of. Although not everyone agrees! See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Procuration kirubakaran
Type your answer here... example of p.p.
Yes, forging a signature without authority is illegal and can be considered a criminal offense. It is important to obtain proper consent before using someone else's signature for any document or agreement.
It COULD be depending on what your intended use of the picture is.
If you have their Power of Attorney. This can be limited or complete. You might be limited to signing it one time on one thing.
In the English-speaking countries pp stands for pro persona -which is Latin and literally means for the person [of] or for and on behalf of.No, it doesn't - it stands for 'per procurationem', meaning to act as someone's proxy.
Yes.
For people: Only if you have legal power of attorney for that person. For businesses: Only if you are officialy authorized by your company to sign on said persons behalf.
This comes from the Latin 'per procurationem' which means by delegation to, or through the agency of. It is used when signing documents on behalf of someone else.This is regularly used when a secretary signs a letter on behalf of the person they work for.For example:Yours,pp. (Then signature here)John SmithHead of OperationsThis would mean someone working for John Smith wrote/finalised the letter and signed it.Hope this helps