Open with a respectful greeting Regardless of the content of your letter, try to begin with a friendly and respectful greeting. Use the recipient's full name and open with a salutation such as “dear Miss. Adkins”, followed by “I hope this letter finds you well.”
I have always found applicant to be trustworthy, hard working and intelligent. When we worked on example, applicant showed good communication skills and I could rely on them to take the initiative and to stay calm under pressure.
Person's name has always been a loving and caring friend/family member/co-worker since we first met. That is why I am writing this letter to defend person's name, because he/she has always been a respected person in the community, and a genuine person to everyone he/she has come across.
A Character Reference Letter for Court offers testimony to support someone in legal situations. Suitable authors include employers, colleagues, teachers, community leaders, or long-time friends.
In person: In an interview, social event, or in court, address a judge as “Your Honor” or “Judge last name.” If you are more familiar with the judge, you may call her just “Judge.” In any context, avoid “Sir” or “Ma'am.” Special Titles.
You start by addressing the letter to the Honorable Judge so and so, and begin with Your honor. You end with respectfully yours, and then sign your name (write your name in block letters underneath your signature.
When referring to a judge in a case use the judge's surname followed by the abbreviation for their judicial office. Examples: Lord Smith SCJ for 'Supreme court Justice Lord Smith', a Supreme Court judge.
1. Use formal language: Address the judge as "Honorable Full Name". 2. Include proper titles: Use "Dear Judge Last Name" as the salutation.