They're both correct, depending upon whether you're talking about any old letter, (a letter), or about a specific letter, (the letter).
You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.You are nearly correct. You are missing the letter e in the middle. It is noticeable.
answer is A. <ABC.
The correct order for a business letter is to always put the date first.
The following are your resumé and covering letter is a correct sentence.
Grammatically correct but illogical. We expect the package to include the letter, not the letter to include the package.
Yes, that statement is correct as a way to indicate the passage of one month since the letter was posted.
The correct female title is ' Dear Madam, '
The answer is A.<ABC.....just took the test.
It is Thank you ...
a letter of respect
Ah, what a lovely question! Both "in your letter" and "on your letter" can be correct, depending on the context. If you're referring to something written inside the letter, you would say "in your letter." If you're talking about something physically attached to the outside of the letter, you would say "on your letter." Just follow your heart and use whichever feels right in the moment.
You are missing a letter h, so the correct spelling is fuschia.