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2006-12-27 12:57:33 · 4 answers · asked by Mr.remrem 2 in Business & Finance Careers & Employment

thanks Mariposa for your answer, but I can not understand a litter of offer, not a letter of offer

2006-12-27 13:15:01 · update #1

4 answers

A letter of offer is a letter that someone sends you when they want to offer you a position with their company. Congrats! Looks like you have a new job offer.

2006-12-27 13:05:47 · answer #1 · answered by Mariposa 7 · 2 0

More broadly, a "letter of offer" is usually a written offer to form a contract of some sort for goods or services.

If it is an offer letter from a company for a job, it is NOT an offer to form a contract, but is a formal offer to hire you as an employee.

Generally, such a letter should include explicit terms and conditions that you can directly accept or refuse. If you need (or want) to modify the terms of the offer as described in the letter you have voided the offer, and "countered" with a new offer of you own.

2006-12-27 13:13:05 · answer #2 · answered by Mark H 4 · 2 0

Do you mean "letter of offer"? This is a written letter you might receive to document a job offer, or if you are making an offer on real estate.

2006-12-27 13:13:13 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

no such thing as "litter of offer". it's "letter of offer". all the answers so far are correct.

2006-12-27 13:29:20 · answer #4 · answered by BlueBox 3 · 1 0

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