Jane and Shirley, you made me laugh out loud. I needed that. Thank you. Never change, Dorothy |
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I use the following and have never thought twice about it. Simple and professional.
Best, Xxxx |
| I've come across v/r a lot. It's short for "very respectfully" |
| Love and licks, |
| I usually just say "Thanks," "Thank you," or more informally, "Thank you so much." |
I see this in the military / DOD frequently. |
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Deuces,
Holler at me, Yours in Jesus Christ, Keep passing open windows, |
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Different conventions for different professions. In law, it is "Best regards," or "Regards," for people you know better. In defense/military, it is "Very respectfully," or "V/R," (by the way, what does very respectfully mean anyway? Reminds me of Martha Stewart and her equally unnecessary "very delicious."
LOL at the person who said "Best regards," sounds like a secretary. I think we can all agree that the vast majority of these sound stupid, but the worst so far is "All best," I will add a new one: "Thanks." With no name after it or anything. Screams "asshole" if you ask me. I hate people who end emails this way. |
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If I don't know the person and it's a business-like e-mail, then I use "With kind regards."
Informal ones to colleagues end with "Thanks." And then there's this classic for when you're feeling ornery: "I fart in your general direction." |
| At State Dept, most people use "many thanks" as a closing. |
| I hate "many thanks." It's so faux British/cosmopolitan. I also hate "best." I either do "thanks," or "--Corrina." |
I like the Oscar the Grouch sentiment - "Have a rotten day!"
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I think best is pretty arrogant. Who's to say who is the best? Best at what?
Slightly above average, Martha |
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I'ma let you finish,
Kanye |
uh oh, I use best regards. But really I use that for things like contacting a hotel or something. For actual work colleagues I use thanks, or just my signature line (which is just name and phone number) |