"Thank you for your support in this matter" is the preferred formal alternative. "Thank you for your time" works in both speaking and writing contexts. "Your attention is appreciated" is suitable for closing messages. "Thank you for listening" is appropriate for meetings only
Start with clear, specific subject line explaining reason for email. Use formal salutation followed by professor's title. Introduce yourself and class if known, otherwise friendly greeting. Keep email body concise and professional. End with gratitude and polite closing
Post provides 10 informal letter samples based on previous exam papers. Examples help understand format, tone and language used in letters. Letters should be 120-150 words long
A formal letter closing signals message completion and expresses appreciation. Closings should match tone and relationship with recipient. Capitalize first word and use comma after closing phrase
PS stands for "post scriptum" and is written after main text. Should appear at bottom of email body, possibly after signature. Used for trivial or tangential information in email correspondence
PS means "after writing" in Latin and traditionally appears after signature. PS and P.S. are interchangeable, with "PS" more common in UK English. PS can stand alone or follow colon without comma. PPS and PPPs are informal, PPPPS is not considered formal