Nobody will ever care what you wrote at the bottom of your letter. Just write down some crappy words and you're done.
2007-06-12 22:37:49
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answer #1
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answered by ~rabin 3
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Faithfully with "Sir" and Sincerely with a name, but I stick to "Regards" plain and simple when sending to people I've met but am not friends with - business associates, etc. That said, my publisher signs off with "Cheers". Might be worth bearing in mind that that isn't the part of your letter most people will be concentrating on.
2007-06-13 03:23:41
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Yours faithfully when it is addressed to Dear Sir. Yours sincerely if it is addressed to the person i.e. Mr Smith. My favourite at the bottom of a fax is ATB = All The best.
2007-06-12 22:27:13
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answer #3
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answered by mrs mac 3
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1. More formal --- Sincerely yours, Yours sincerely, or even just Sincerely
2. less formal--- Sincerely, Kind/Best/Warm regards, Regards, *Best wishes
3. informal --- Best (wishes), Regards, * Just write your name *, See you, Thanks, etc., etc.
2007-06-12 22:32:38
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answer #4
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answered by Jim 7
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yours sincerly is only used when you have the name of the person, yours faithfully is only used if you dont have the name of the person ( when u use sir/madam)
2007-06-12 22:34:08
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answer #5
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answered by scooby doo 1
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kind regards.. yours faithfully
2007-06-12 23:06:20
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answer #6
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answered by sammie 6
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yours truly.
2007-06-12 22:28:02
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answer #7
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answered by ǁSӎaƦť Sţưḟḟ ǁ 2
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