"Your Honor" is an appropriate salutation to use in a letter addressed to a judge when you do not know their name.
In the upper left side of the email/letter you would write: The Honorable John (or Jane) Smith, and beneath that is where you would put their address. The salutation should be "Dear Senator Smith", and the closing should be "Sincerely, John Doe" Example: * The Honorable John Smith * ABC Street * Any town, Any state, 12345 Dear Senator Smith, Sincerely, Your name
The Honorable Firstname Surname Dear Mr./Ms. Surname, Sincerely yours, http://www.librarycat.org/SVLS/html/lawmakers/correct_form.html Do address to "The Honorable" but Do NOT put Mr. or Ms. (and certainly not Mrs.) on the salutation after Dear when addressing someone who has been voted to the US Senate or House of Representatives. Use their title, such as Senator, Congressman/Congresswoman or Representative followed by their last name. http://www.ita.doc.gov/ita_sec/Address%20and%20Salutation.htm
Many people are unsure of what salutation to use in a letter. Unless you know the person well, it's best to use a formal salutation versus a casual one.
Example: He was an extremely honorable soldier.
According to ... http://www.svls.lib.ca.us/SVLS/html/lawmakers/correct_form.html ... the answer is The Honorable Firstname Surname Dear Senator Surname, Sincerely yours, Hope this is correct and helps ...
Walmart greeters must give salutation to all who enter the store.
When producing a mail-shot to prospective customers, what should be the salutation.
When abbreviating the word "Honorable" as in a title assigned to a judge, use Hon.
After the salutation of a business letter, the correct punctuation to use is a colon.
A good salutation for a church foundation letter would be 'blessings'. You could also use your normal salutation such as 'sincerely yours'.
Dean actually is the proper salutation. One could say: Dean Redmond, would you please sign this form? Alternatively you could just use the Dr. salutation or the Professor salutation if those are appropriate, which they generally are.