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Hello I Was Wondering If Anybody Would Be So Kind To Translate The Following Phrase From Armenian

Question : Is 'hello dear all' a correct phrase to start a sentence?Answer : “Hello dear all” is correct. But, I would strongly advise against using it. I say so for several reasons.We mean what we say. We are how we present ourselves. “Dear all” sounds impersonal. A speaker/writer must be able to form a connection with their listener(s)/reader(s). It sounds high and mighty and also cold on the part of the user, unless the user and the individual/group for whom/which the appellation is being used have some sort of familiarity or affinity from previous times. Otherwise, if the occasion is a first then it will just sound cold and uneffortful. It also suggests to the audience/readership that the user is trying get by shortcuts. Shoddiness begets shoddines. It a writer/speaker is being shoddy then the reader(s)/audience will reciprocate shoddily too. The outcome shall be uneventful though appropriate for half-hearted efforts. It is rather better that the speaker/writer put in a little more effort to get a desired outcome and come across as warm and welcoming to their subjects. This will be engaging for both. The recipients will delight in what they are receiving and the speaker/writer will be delighted with the desired outcome. It also generates and maintains interest.Rather than “Hello dear all/everyone/both”, one must make more effort and employ phrases such as, “Hello to all”, “Hello to all of you”, “Hello to all my dearest”, “Hello to one and all”, “Hello to all and sundry”, “Hello to all my (dear) friends”, “Hello to all my (respectable) colleagues”, “A wonderful day/noon/evening to (all) (of) my eminent superiors”, so on and so forth.

The phrase "If you're wondering" is an incomplete idea, where the rest of the idea is implied.The full idea takes the form, "If X, then Y". As you the "...then Y" part of the idea is what is left out, and is understood in the context of the conversation in which it appears. Without the conversation it is hard to grasp the meaning of the "If" portion of the phase.The context is usually where the recipient of the phrase, might have an implied unanswered question, and the speaker of the phrase has either already answerd the implied question, as in:"The car that hit her was a red Mercedes SUV, if you're wondering"; or, is about to immediately answer the implied question, as in:"If you're wondering, then the car that hit her was a red Mercedes SUV."

Dear ABC,Greetings of the day..!..your matter..Thank you for your patience all this while and cooperation.I am looking forward to hearing from you soon and thanking you in anticipation.Thanks and RegardsYour NameXYZ

,,Schönen Tag noch!'' is my personal favourite, but note you'd only say it if genuine or if there was a reason to say it - not just for the sake of it like idiots who work at the apple store.

Over the last few years, there have been some changes in standard greetings, and here are some general guidelines to help you avoid accidentally insulting anyone.The old distinction between married (Mrs + surname) and unmarried (Miss + surname) are no longer used. Instead, use Ms (+ surname). Ms is pronounced (Mizz) and is used for all women – whether married or not.If you are replying to a letter in which the woman has written her name as Mrs + surname, then it is fine to reply to her using Mrs + her surname.If you are writing to a person in a company whose name you don't know, you can start with "Dear Sir / Madam". If you know for sure that the person is a woman, but you don't know her name, you can write "Dear Madam".

A B C D E F G ? I know do re mi fa sol la si do. Is there any connection between the two.?

Hello everyone, I'm italian but I live in the US and I've been teaching piano for many years, the do-re-mi-fa-sol-la-si notation (and yes is SI not TI) is the italian way to call the notes, in english the first note is the equivalent of the first letter of the alphabet so americans and english start from abcdefg, for us italians the first note is DO which is C, it's just a matter of culture, the origin of the italian notation comes from a verse of latin literature :
UT queant laxis
REsonare fibris
MIra gestorum
FAmuli tuorum
SOLve polluti
LAbii reatum
sancte Johannes.

the not UT was used until the 1700 and then Italy started using DO instead but France is still using UT, the german and anglos-saxon notation just adopted the letters ABCDEFG.
I don't know why in USA they spell the seventh italian note TI instead of SI but I do believe that is connected to the musical "The sound of music" where for rhyme reasons they composed the song do re mi fa sol la TI , but trust me TI it's really a mistake and you can research anywhere. hope this was helpful

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