You should put a comma before a person name if you're talking directly to them. ex- Please come here,Lily.
No, you do not typically put a comma between a person's last name and their suffix (e.g., Jr., Sr., III). You would write the full name without a comma between them.
yes u do you put it like this Dear teacher, then u carry on with your letter
Yes, a comma is used after the salutation in a formal letter. For example, "Dear Mr. Smith,".
you put in a comma when you pause natulary, e.g My name is Matthew, what is your name. Hope this helped
No, you do not need to put a comma after "my sister" when stating her name. For example, "My sister Sarah" does not require a comma between "sister" and "Sarah."
If you know the person's name, then try "Dear Chancellor Anderson" (replacing Anderson with the actual last name). If not, then "Dear Chancellor" is fine. The "Dear" is optional. "Chancellor Anderson" would be fine as a greeting. Put a comma after whatever you use. Avoid use of the first name unless you already know the person and their comfort level with informality.
If you begin the letter with 'Dear Sir or Dear Madam', the letter should end 'Yours Faithfully'. If you start a letter with the persons name it should end 'Yours Sincerely'
You put a comma after the Dear & (person's name) example: Dear Margaret, No offense, but you have huge glasses. Say "None taken." One popular girl at school, Claire That's how you write a friendly letter P.S. Margaret James, really, please change your glasses.
Yes, in a formal letter or email, the comma is placed after the word "sincerely" before your name. For example: Sincerely, [Your Name].
Yes, a comma is typically used between a name and listing credentials. For example: John Smith, PhD.
In business letters, you should use a colon (:) if you use any punctuation. The new way is to have no punctuation after the greeting in business letters. But if you omit punctuation there, you also have to omit the comma after the closing. In personal letters, people use a comma after the greeting.