No. It is generally the opening salutation in a letter preceding the recipients name.
Well my dear Watson, Elem. would be an acceptable abbreviation for Elementary.
"Dh" is short for "dear husband." It is a commonly used abbreviation in online communication, especially in texts and social media.
VVS stands for very very special and it means a person near and dear to us !
Cher Monsieur is Dear Sir. if you know his name is Dupont, write Cher M. Dupont
To address multiple doctors, simply pluralize the abbreviation for doctor. For example, you would write "Dear Drs. John, Bob, and Sara".
The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.The abbreviation is AAS.
That can be done if all the recipients are male, however there is a more common way to do this. "To whom it may concern, The rest of your message" ============================== You could, for example, also phrase your salutation as, "Dear Ms Smith and Mr Jones," or perhaps even, "Dear Ladies and Gentlemen." And for goodness sake, drop the apostrophe already. This is plural, not possessive or an abbreviation!
The abbreviation for abbreviation is "abbr."
dear dear
The abbreviation for centimeter is cm. The abbreviation for meter is m. The abbreviation for inches is in. The abbreviation for liter is L.
According to the University of Mary Washington's website, the proper way to address a general is to use is full rank, plus his full name, then a comma, then an abbreviation of his branch of service. As an example: Dear General David MacArthur, USMC To address both the General and his wife, simply add the abbreviation Mrs. after the General's Rank you would address it as follows Dear General and Mrs. David MacArthur, USMC You may see the chart in the related link below:
Dear Senator (last name): or Dear Senator: