A salutation is a greeting, or the opening line of a letter, such as... Dear Sir,
MESSAGE Date Time saluation Content WRITER'S NAME
I would say following the letter address, space two lines for the date, then another two lines for a reference (if applicable) then two lines following that comes the saluation. Between the letter address and the saluation, I would say at least four lines
you put you hand over your chest while you shake the other person's hand, and then take the hand on your heart and cover your other hand.
Providing u are not using his name and person for another Jesus (IICor.4:7) like most around us today are doing.
The letter salutation is written as: Dear Doctor and Judge Smith. The envelope is written as: Doctor Adam Smith and the Honorable Eve Smith.
Ro Johnson has written: 'The way to glory, or, The preaching of the Gospell is the ordinary meanes of our saluation' -- subject(s): Catholic Church, Controversial literature, English Sermons, Sermons, Sermons, English, Tithes
I think it's preferable to go with "James R. Jones, PhD," although you could also say "Dr. James R. Jones." Please never use both "Dr." and "PhD" at the same time...pick one or the other. The saluation of the letter would then be "Dear Dr. Jones," and so on.
Assuming that she has taken her husband's last name, then you would use her title, given first name and married name, Dr. Jane Jones M.D. Although it is proper to refer to a wife as Mrs. John Smith you would not use the husmand's first name with the wife's title because you are emphasizing her professional status and accomplishments here.
When you are speaking, the judge is usually addressed as "Your Honor" (As in, "Your Honor, my name is _____ and I'm the defendant and representing myself"). Less common is the Title, "Judge" followed by the last name (This assumes you can correctly pronounce it), such as "Judge Hardy, may I ask the Court (never YOU) a question?" If you are writing, the judge is usually referred to as "The Honorable ___(First, Middle Initial, Last Name) _____".
It's no different than any other type of card:Salutation: Dear xxxxClosing: "Love, xxx" or "sincerely, xxxx"Also, note that giving cards on Hanukkah is not traditional. It is something that only some Jews do, which is borrowed from Christmas.
For a business letter, always spell out the month for a date, such as June 22, 2010.In the top right hand corner, you would type these items:(first line) Your Street Address(second line) Your city, State Zip Code(third line) Month date, year(Do not insert spaces between each line.)(Skip 2 lines)(Begin the receiver's name, address, city/State/Zip, one item on each line.)(Skip 2 lines) Use a full saluation, such as Dear President Obama (followed by a comma)(Skip one line)Then begin your letter.