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Letter

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A letter is a written message from one person to another. Letters are usually intended to be received by someone far away. Before widespread availability of typewriters and computers, letters were always written by hand. Nowadays, letters are only widely used by companies who send out letters to large numbers of people, who may not have access to the internet for e-mail. The term letter is sometimes used for e-mail messages with a formal letter-like format. Historically, letters exist from the time of ancient Egypt and Sumer, all the way through Rome and Greece and China. Letters make up several of the books of the Christian Bible.

Advantages

Letters are still used, particularly by companies and advertisers. This is because of three main advantages:

The letter-delivering process

Here is how a letter gets from the sender to the recipient:
  1. Sender writes letter and buys a stamp, which they place on the front of the envelope.
  2. Sender puts their letter in a mailbox and does nothing more.
  3. The National Postal Service for the sender's country (e.g. the Royal Mail in the UK or the U.S. Postal Service in the U.S.) empties the postbox and takes all the contents to the regional sorting office.
  4. The sorting office then sort each letter by address and postcode, and deliver the letters belonging to a particular area to that area's post office. Letters belonging to a different region are sent to that region's sorting office, to be sorted further.
  5. The local post office dispatches their letters to their delivery personnel (postman/woman) who deliver them to the appropriate houses.
This whole process, depending on how far the sender is from the recipient, can take anywhere from 2-3 days to 3-4 weeks. International mail is sent via trains and planes to other countries.

Letter layout

United Kingdom

The following is the normal way to set out a letter: (Note: This is the style in the UK. See below for the format used in the American.)
Sender's address here
24 Lambert Street
Stoke-on-Trent ST4 4WE





Recipient's name and address here
Mr. Jimmy Wales
25 Lambert Street
Stoke-on-Trent ST4 4WE

Date here
Formal: 29/08/2005 Informal: 29 August 2005

Main body
Formal: Dear Sir, Acquaintance: Dear Mr. Wales, Informal: Dear Jimmy,
Content
Formal: Yours faithfully, Acquaintance: Yours sincerely, Informal: Best wishes,
Sender's Name
Formal: Sender's Occupation and Enclosures Informal: Nothing (optional: PS / Post Script = Afterthought)

United States

The following is the modified block format for a business letter, common in the United States:

Sender's address here
24 Evergreen Terrace
Springfield, IL 12345





Date here
Formal: August 25, 2005 Informal: 8/25/05


Recipient's name and address here
Mr. John Doe
25 First Street
Anytown, VA 10005

Content here
Formal: Dear Sir, Informal: Dear Jimmy,
Content

Closing Here
Formal: Sincerely, Informal: Best Wishes,
Signature here
Typed full name here






The sender's address and closing generally begin about one-half to two-thirds of the way across the page. The full block format is similar. In this format, however, all sections begin at the left margin. Also, paragraphs are not indented at all, rather beginning at the left margin along with all other lines. A single blank line is used to distinguish paragraphs.

See also

Types of letters

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
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From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

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