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Question #1 - Proper format
What is the correct way to insert the name of a physician in the body of a letter? Would the following example be correct?
"You chose to honor—[first name last name, M.D.]—with special recognition. I'm quite certain [Dr. last name] greatly appreciated your thoughtfulness."
How would you deal with this example?
Question #2 - Is a comma needed?
Media and communications have been an interest of mine since I was twelve, when I had the opportunity to take a tour of Baker + Baker's Boston office. Does there need to be a comma after "twelve?"
Does the comma belong after the word "twelve?" If so, can you tell us why?
Question #3 - Work speak?
I was wondering if you could clear something up for me. At my work many people use the following term, "The work is pending to be submitted."
First, I'm not even sure which definition of pending they mean to use and second, I don't think anything can be 'pending to be [verb]ed.' Am I crazy? Thanks!
What do you think? Is this phrasing correct? If not, how would you fix it?
Question #4 - Are my sentences clear?
Do the following statements need to be rewritten?
What's your opinion? Do these sentences need to be rewritten for clarity?
Question #5 - Capital or Hyphenate?
My son's fifth grade teacher is insisting that "all around competition" should be capitalized in the following sentence:
"Ms. Johnson practices many hours a day for the gymnastics all around competition."
Her reasoning is that it is a "specific type of competition." I think there should be a hyphen between "all" and "around" but no capitalization. Please help.
What do you think? Is the teacher correct or is our reader correct?
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