Letter to the principal in telugu
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Address the letter to the school or educational organization—the place now without a roof: no electricity, no water, no gas, destroyed walls and graffiti saying "No more hurricanific WE way"—at the very top left margin.
[School name (line one, 2–3 spaces down from the utmost top, starting on the left side margin), school physical street or PO Box address (line two directly under line one: address block it), school's city/state and zip code.]
3. Drop down two-three spaces: center a letter's date at the middle of the page.
4. Move down two-three spaces for "ATTENTION": (colon followed by) the principal's name and title (i.e.) "Michael Mauler", "Principal" and then the name of the school or educational organization.
5. Within or at (on) the Attention Line—after addressing whose attention the letter writer is requesting—write a purpose or reason statement, "Teluga Speaking Student Seeks Recuse From Mandatory English Speaking."
The attention line can be centered on the page: tab indented or started flush at the same left margin as the very top address (three line) block.
6. Skip two lines and begin salutation line at the far left margin or within the same tab (indent)—if an indentation is used for the attention line—such as "Greetings, Prinicipal Michael Mauler," "Dear Principal Mauler," or "Principal Michael Mauler,"
[Make sure to place only a comma after the addressed's person or entity name on opening salutation line.]
7. Start the text body—what, where, who when, why and how: reason, letter's topic or subject matter from whom, for what purpose, feasibility, hoped for outcome —two spaces below opening salutation,
"My name is young (snippity) sir, Brat Battered: I can only manage coherent speech in the lost language of Teluga. Because of my language skill deficiency issue, it seems I should be excused from the stress of trying to speak only English: especially since I really have no thing of intellectual value to say. No news is good or "fake" news when speech delivery is in Teluga."
[The body text should start at farthest left margin: except if choosing a tab or indent for the first line of a paragraph; a paragraph should be no more than four-five sentences in length before starting a new paragraph.
The first line of a paragraph should be explained within the paragraph's other sentences and the last line of a paragraph is to either summarize or justify (explain) the paragraph text. Reference: the above "Brat Battered" paragraph.
Each new paragraph should be seperated from the one before by two spaces.]
8. Lastly—after saying (writing) whatever the letter writer felt was so necessary to express—write a closing salutation line (signing off) two-three spaces below the last line of the last body text paragraph.
Make sure to write only a comma after "Sincerely," "Regards," "Respectfully," before dropping down two-three spaces to enter the writer's block: writer's name, address, position/title (i.e. "idiot savant student"), phone number, email address.
[The writer's block should be fashioned in the same form as the title address—the letter's intended recipient—block: starting at the left margin, etc.]
If the letter communication includes more than one page, a page number needs to be centered at the bottom of each page (2–3 spaces above the page's bottom edge: -2-, -3- "Page Four", "3 of 4".
A header/footer text should be assigned to each page in addition to the first title (address block/attention) page: a page number can be assigned within a header's or footer's text.
[School name (line one, 2–3 spaces down from the utmost top, starting on the left side margin), school physical street or PO Box address (line two directly under line one: address block it), school's city/state and zip code.]
3. Drop down two-three spaces: center a letter's date at the middle of the page.
4. Move down two-three spaces for "ATTENTION": (colon followed by) the principal's name and title (i.e.) "Michael Mauler", "Principal" and then the name of the school or educational organization.
5. Within or at (on) the Attention Line—after addressing whose attention the letter writer is requesting—write a purpose or reason statement, "Teluga Speaking Student Seeks Recuse From Mandatory English Speaking."
The attention line can be centered on the page: tab indented or started flush at the same left margin as the very top address (three line) block.
6. Skip two lines and begin salutation line at the far left margin or within the same tab (indent)—if an indentation is used for the attention line—such as "Greetings, Prinicipal Michael Mauler," "Dear Principal Mauler," or "Principal Michael Mauler,"
[Make sure to place only a comma after the addressed's person or entity name on opening salutation line.]
7. Start the text body—what, where, who when, why and how: reason, letter's topic or subject matter from whom, for what purpose, feasibility, hoped for outcome —two spaces below opening salutation,
"My name is young (snippity) sir, Brat Battered: I can only manage coherent speech in the lost language of Teluga. Because of my language skill deficiency issue, it seems I should be excused from the stress of trying to speak only English: especially since I really have no thing of intellectual value to say. No news is good or "fake" news when speech delivery is in Teluga."
[The body text should start at farthest left margin: except if choosing a tab or indent for the first line of a paragraph; a paragraph should be no more than four-five sentences in length before starting a new paragraph.
The first line of a paragraph should be explained within the paragraph's other sentences and the last line of a paragraph is to either summarize or justify (explain) the paragraph text. Reference: the above "Brat Battered" paragraph.
Each new paragraph should be seperated from the one before by two spaces.]
8. Lastly—after saying (writing) whatever the letter writer felt was so necessary to express—write a closing salutation line (signing off) two-three spaces below the last line of the last body text paragraph.
Make sure to write only a comma after "Sincerely," "Regards," "Respectfully," before dropping down two-three spaces to enter the writer's block: writer's name, address, position/title (i.e. "idiot savant student"), phone number, email address.
[The writer's block should be fashioned in the same form as the title address—the letter's intended recipient—block: starting at the left margin, etc.]
If the letter communication includes more than one page, a page number needs to be centered at the bottom of each page (2–3 spaces above the page's bottom edge: -2-, -3- "Page Four", "3 of 4".
A header/footer text should be assigned to each page in addition to the first title (address block/attention) page: a page number can be assigned within a header's or footer's text.
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