- Omission of comma between city state (USPS standard)
Could the example below work? The USPS does not use a comma between the city and the two-letter state abbreviation Just your opinion, of course Arrested on charges of conspiracy were: John Smith (40) of East Rutherford NJ, Dave Thompson (39) of Tallahassee FL and Arthur Davis (55) of Dallas
- City, State, ZIP Code - comma? | WordReference Forums
Hello, when writing an American address do you separate City, State and ZIP Code by a comma or not I saw it done both ways, which one is correct? Thank you
- ATT, ATTN, FAO . . . - abbreviations for attention in correspondence
You're close: Attn In a business letter, though, you're usually better off avoiding abbreviations, and some style guides recommend leaving 'attention' out entirely
- I cant make out the measurements 8-5 8 x 5-3 8 - WordReference Forums
Hi there, I hope my inquiry is not beyond the scope of this forum I want to send a package using USPS mail service I can't make out the following measurements in inches It reads USPS-Produced Small Box: 8-5 8" x 5-3 8" x 1-5 8" Maximum weight 4 pounds I wonder why there is a hyphen
- Should the following abbreviations be punctuated? - WordReference Forums
Unfortunately, I have not been able to find a USPS Web site which states this clearly, and so for the moment will refer to this Web page by another source (which has links to USPS Web pages which are no longer active )
- ride to ones rescue - WordReference Forums
I was reading Put your money where your mail is | the economist These are the distressed customers to whose rescue the USPS hopes to ride My understanding of this sentence: ==>These are the distressed customers,and the USPS hopes to ride to their rescue Is this right? If so What does ride
- Inbound Outbound flights? - WordReference Forums
Agreeing with Pedro, and with a slightly different perspective: Inbound trains, buses, flights are coming to the speaker's location, while the outbound ones are leaving from that location Of course if you are not at the airport or train station, Pedro's definitions are perfect
- letter carrier (postman) vs courier | WordReference Forums
In AE, letter carriers are what used to be called - and still of are called, unofficially - mailmen (BE and at one time in AE as well, postmen) They work for the US Postal Service and deliver anything sent through the Postal Service and only things sent through the Postal Service They are government employees Couriers are people who work for private courier services that specialize in hand
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