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I am a junior at a highschooler and in order to complete a project I need an experts help. I have found a instructor/professor over at a university and am in need to conact them via email. I want to adress him/her with respect. How do I do so?
Many thanks,
Thank you for taking your time to read this email,
God bless you,

2007-01-15 03:47:12 · 11 answers · asked by Kurious_Kat 3 in Society & Culture Etiquette

11 answers

I would write it in pretty much the same way I would write any other professional letter. Just make sure you write it well, use good grammar and spelling, and express your thoughts and questions intelligently. That doesn't mean you need to use lots of huge words--don't do that. Just make sure you express yourself well and use good language.

Also, make sure you address the person as Dr *insert name here*.

2007-01-15 03:58:00 · answer #1 · answered by I'm Still Here 5 · 2 0

Dear Dr. Jones,

Sincerely
YourName

2007-01-15 04:49:30 · answer #2 · answered by drshorty 7 · 1 0

Well, just write to them in a polite manner. You don't have to be posh or know fancy words just because they have a PhD. Just explain that you require some help in completing a project and as they seem to be an expert in the field, you hoped they might be able to help you. I'm sure they will be very flattered that you have sought them out, and they will help you. Good luck!

2007-01-15 03:56:59 · answer #3 · answered by claire b 5 · 0 1

(a million) style a dissertation help team with different grad scholars on your branch. (2) Set operating hours on your dissertation. keep them! do no longer do some thing else in this time. regardless of in case you're only rereading what you've written or interpreting resources you've already examine, that is tremendous--your mind will be engaged on your dissertation topic. ***maximum significant (3) Ask your consultant in case you are able to set up accepted circumstances to satisfy with him/her to communicate your progression. (4) evaluate getting carry of a replica of "the thanks to write down and live to inform the tale a Dissertation." some people locate it sensible, some do not. (5) Face the phobia. well known it and then plow on previous it. you in trouble-free words won't be able to recognize how good you're till you try your toughest. **2d maximum significant (6) in the experience that your topic has been authorized and consider exceeded your orals, that constitutes a freelance. Your dept has reported, "in case you do this artwork, we are able to bypass you." It would not must be the acceptable dissertation in the historic previous of your dept (even with the actual incontrovertible truth that it may well be astounding if it were!). you only ought to do what you reported you would do, and also you'll be "Dr. regardless of." (7) bypass to the library and skim modern-day dissertations written by using different scholars on your dept. this provide you with an theory of what's predicted.

2016-10-31 04:11:46 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The PhD question is a little tricky. It is best if you can find out the person's preference or the style used in the person's environment. In the US, many PhD's in academic settings use "Dr." However, in the UK, I have heard only "Mr." and "Ms." Outside a university setting, "Mr." and "Ms." are more common than "Dr."--even in the US.

2007-01-15 20:03:44 · answer #5 · answered by tnbadbunny 5 · 1 0

Since they have a Doctorate, address them as Dr.

Dr. Smith is an example.

2007-01-15 03:56:29 · answer #6 · answered by Wolfshadow 3 · 1 0

If you are speaking directly to him/her, say, "Dr. Namehere". If you are addressing a letter to him/her, you can either say "Dr. firstname lastname" or "firstname lastname, Ph.D."

If the person is a university instructor, it is also acceptable to call him/her "Professor Namehere".

2007-01-15 04:48:58 · answer #7 · answered by sdc_99 5 · 2 0

Dr.


I would avoid the "God bless you"

Try ending it with:

Thank you, in advance, for any assistance you may be able to provide.

Best,

2007-01-15 03:59:06 · answer #8 · answered by ☼High☼Voltage☼Blonde☼ 4 · 2 0

Dr. So and So Smith

2007-01-15 04:56:07 · answer #9 · answered by Sherry K 5 · 1 0

well, first you make sure to use spell cheque (yes, I realize I spelled it wrong)

2007-01-15 11:26:45 · answer #10 · answered by ramman 4 · 0 0

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