Depending on the post office they are either:
A: Sent to the Nearest Church
B: Kept on site just like the letters that are sent to Santa
C: Thrown away
D: Returned to Sender
That is not correct. Postal rates are the rate to send a certain piece of mail. The postage rate for a letter up to the weight of 1 ounce is 44 cents. You can find postage rates at your local post office.
Post Office people are grinches, so they just throw away all those letters torecycle bins. Since Santa's address cannot be located in the Northpole, themails are all undelivered. Post office love those letters though. They maketons of money from the stamps.It depends on which postal service you mean. Many postal services throughout the world have systems in place to handle Santa Mail, even including a standard reply.
Postage and delivery prices for mails and letters sent to Bangladesh vary depending on the weight, dimensions, and service chosen. It is recommended to check with your local postal service provider for specific pricing information.
It depends on how it was sent. If it was mailed at a post office, the Italian postal service may be able to track it. If it was sent by a private service (FedEx, UPS, DHL, etc.), then try the website of the shipping company.
The post office wold be the Golgi Bodies because there is where things are packaged and then sent to the Endoplasmic Reticulum(ER) to be shipped off somewhere.
The most popular definition of the word mails is: packages, parcels and letters and similar items that are delivered and or sent using the postal system.
Letters can be sent to an address.
"Not really. But during Christmas time, kids are allowed to write letters to Santa and take them to the post office, but they all get thrown out probably."
Harry lived in Surrey, a real county in England. The town he lived in, Little Winging, is fictitious, therefore there is no postal code assigned to it. In the first movie, the acceptance letters sent to Harry didn't have a postal code printed on them.
I think they goto santas workshop ask Santa at the mall
The sender of the letters in both cases was Mafalda Hopkirk, who works for the Ministry of Magic, Improper Use of Magic Office department.
It depends what postal carrier it was sent by. You could ring the sorting office and ask them if it was processed. It might of gone to the wrong house.