if the date was 9/10/08 it would be in spanish, 10/9/08 then you would do your spanish name
from address date to address salutation subject {body } name signature
A formal letter has the sender's address and the date in the upper right corner, unless it is written on letterhead. Below that, on the left side, it has the recipient's address.
A semi-letter refers to a semi-formal letter. The correspondence is written on letter-head paper with a return address, block style, and formal salutation.
To address this person in a formal business letter, you would address the letter to "Dear Ms. Rodrigues." If you do not know the person the letter is being addressed to, start with, "To Whom it May Concern" or "Dear Sir or Madam."
yes, so it stands out
we should write the address of the person to whom we are sending
You can be formal or less formal: The formal approach is to address it to: The Prime Minister, 10 Downing Street, London SW1 and start the letter "Dear Prime Minister". The less formal approach is to address it to: The Rt Hon David Cameron PM, 10 Downing Street London SW1 and start the letter "Dear Mr Cameron" Addressing him as "Dear Dave" probably won't get a reply.
(Dear) [rank] [name]
The difference between a formal letter and an email is proof of service. There is no proof of service for an email because the sender has no way to check to see if the letter was read. A formal letter can be sent with a return receipt request to make sure a person receives it. An email does not have a definite source unless the IP address of the sender is tracked. The formal letter can have a return address.
from address ( leave a line)date(leave a line)to addresssaluation[subject]your's trulysignature (in left hand side)by this we write the formal letter
Dear Hinnees
Misses or Mlles