I was taught - "yours sincerely" when you have addressed your salutation by name; ie. "Dear John" and "yours faithfully" when addressed "Dear Sir/Madam".
I use "Yours sincerely" sometimes but have avoided "Yours faithfully" for quite some time as it seems to (whether incorrectly or not) carry a somewhat religious connotation...More common usage is now "Best Regards" or "Kind Regards", but I tend to use "Yours sincerely" for those times when a written / signed letter is required.
A bit like robd, I was taught Yours sincerely is used when the recipient is personally known by you (an acquaintance or friend) whereas Yours faithfully is used when you have never met the recipient. For me, that translates to written letters and for emails, pretty much universally I end with Kind Regards.
The letter salutation I struggle with is when addressing a lady I have not met. I don't feel Dear Ma'am is correct (which I feel is too informal) but I shudder to use Dear Madam for fear of a slap in the face if/when I ever do meet her. I usually try to skirt around it by using a name, Dear Mrs Smith or Dear Miss Jones etc, or if I can get away with it Dear Sir/Madam.
others happy to go for just 51%
Hence a shift to competency based assessments. For those who scraped through with 50% is it a valid concern at "passing" them when they perhaps know less than 50% of the subject? What about the 50% they don't know?
I'm slowly reading through the pages of this thread so I apologise if this has been discussed but my sentence above raised one grammatical example that I do frequently struggle with. The use of
than and
then. I try to work to
than being a comparison word and then being a chronological word but at time it does baffle me, I must admit.
Ah yes, another one of my pet hates in engineering. Someone quotes a number or measurement, and there's no units (or the wrong units) specified.
Or the incorrect written form for a SI unit (of which I'm not sure if it is a pet hate of mine or whether I'm a perpetrator :shock
. 1000w instead of 1000W. I was taught when the unit was named after a person, than a capital W is correctly used in the unit. A unit not named after a person is written in lower case hence a formula may be P=W/t with power (P) measured in watts (W) which is named after James Watt and work (W) measured in Joules (J) which is named after James Prescott Joule and the time measured in seconds (s) which is simply a unit not named after a person. A shame about the two capital Ws in the same formula though!
This, in my mind, is being confused a bit by the ongoing standardisation undertaken by the Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures (CGPM) which encourages the use of lower case for negative power prefixes and upper case for positive power prefixes with the unit itself in lower case, so in the case of power to a negative power it would be expressed as μw or mw and power to a positive power expressed as Kw or Mw. I must admit that I find this a bit at odds and I still express both with capitalisation of the SI unit rather than the prefix, as in μW or mW or kW or MW. Am I wrong to do so?
PS, sorry for starting a sentence with a conjunction!
Agreed. But the problem mainly stems from the focus on communication without any regard for grammar. That may be fine in some situations where getting a message across is much more important (e.g. imperative situations), but in other cases it is not acceptable to have a poor standard in either.
This reminds me of a trashy movie I once endured. I cannot remember the name of it (forgettable it was), but it was a tale about a young adult propelled forward in time to good ol' US of A where an average knowledge base was at idiot level. This guy was first arrested for some trivial "crime" (and sentenced to death if I recollect correctly), but eventually became King or President simply because he knew how to grow crops for a starving population. Starving, because decades of mindless TV shows and no credible education had created a nation of intellectually depleted souls, unable to function. Yes it was rubbish, but it made me stop and think (for 5 seconds or so) whether the mindless (and often violent) TV shows of today, coupled with limited value placed on education, could in fact result in a dumbing down of society as a whole.
I've also noticed that Best Regards is now sometimes being shortened to just Best, and by some older and high profile professional people too! I've done a double take on a couple of occasions when I've received e-mails with just Best in a professional environment, from professionals.
I've also had Brgds (presumably Best Regards).