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  1. Dear Mr. McCartney, I have for five years considered myself a true admirer of your work. It passed me by for much of my young life, as in the decades when you were at the height of your fame I was suspicious of Pop. I listened to Male Voice Choirs and occasionally Female Voice Choirs (but never mixed). I was drawn to you in later life through ...

  2. Both choices are good for ending formal letters. You should use “yours faithfully” when starting the letter with “dear sir/ madam ” or when you don’t know the recipient’s name. You should use “yours sincerely” when using a personal name or if you know the recipient. We refer to both of these statements as “complementary closes

  3. Starting and Ending Letters. Letters that start "Dear Sir," should end "Yours truly" (US convention) or "Yours faithfully" (UK convention). Letters that start with a name (e.g., "Dear Mr. Jones"), should end "Sincerely yours" (US convention) or "Yours sincerely" (UK convention). This infographic summarizes the different scenarios:

  4. Dear Mrs Phillips, Arriving home from the Church Hall on the 31 st of last month, I was looking forward to a well-earned cup of tea when knocks of suitable volume to awake the dead accosted my home. A gang of youths had seen fit to dress up as Vampires, Demons and other Ungodly phantasmagoria to “prank” (as is the youthful vernacular ...

  5. The Zoologist leading our group of uncorrupted panda-seekers was not only a rather know-it-all woman, but a rather know-it-all woman wearing shorts. There they were, in God’s own England – canvas, thigh length and stinking of the devil. On a woman. As a churchwoman, Mabel could not believe her eyes, and this time it was not the cataracts.

  6. Using each other as alibis, two friends sneak off to indulge in secret affairs — but their elaborate web of lies unravels when one of them goes missing. Watch trailers & learn more.

  7. The traditional British style would be to use yours faithfully for letters starting Dear Sir, Dear Madam, or something grander such as My Lord, and to use yours sincerely for the slightly less formal letters starting with a name such as Dear Mr Smith, Dear Baroness Jones, Dear Sir James etc. . The point of both is say that the writer has been telling the truth.