To ;
The Manager
Travel Agency Name,
Address of Travel Agency
Sub: Arrangement for holiday trip
Dear Sir/Madam,
I would like to request you for making arrangements for a holiday trip for a period of 7 days starting from 18th February, 2017. The trip would comprise of the following places [Destination1, Destination2 and Destination3] for a family of 3. We would like to board from [Origin] on the night of 18th February and halt at Destination1 for 2 days. From there, we would depart for Destination2 on the night of 20th February halting for another couple of days. On the 22nd of February, we shall leave for Destination3 for another 2 days. And finally, we would head back home on the night of 24th February.
I would be very much obliged if you could arrange for a flight schedule for the above mentioned trip and kindly forward a copy of the same for our reference at the earliest. I am attaching the personal details of the members such as Name, Age, Gender, Address etc for your convenience. I would be very much happy to oblige any other formalities required by the Agency. In case, the Agency requires any other clarification. I can be contacted at [mobile number] or by email [email address].
Thanking you in anticipation.
Yours faithfully,
Your name
Your address
Answer:
Take a nice hot shower and don't study for rest of the day! get a nice sleep! pls brainliest me if it was helpful
I believe it’s A. Let me know if it’s correct afterwards.
The second-person “you,” likening the reader to a trusted confidant. The final line of the flashback portion of the novel is “God, I wish you could’ve been there,” suggesting Holden’s loneliness would have been relieved by having a friend like the reader with him during his experiences. The second-person address also draws attention to Holden’s unreliability as a narrator. Throughout the novel, Holden tries to convince the reader to interpret events one way while simultaneously presenting evidence that the opposite interpretation is correct. For example, he frequently insists how well he knows people – “The thing is, you didn’t know Stradlater. I knew him,” or “I know old Jane like a book.” However, his interactions with Stradlater, and his reluctance to contact Jane, suggest he is neither as intimate nor comfortable with them as he’d like the reader to believe. He also makes several references to how much he hates movies, and thinks his brother D.B. is a “prostitute” for writing for them, yet he mentions going to the movies several times. In these ways, Holden’s attempts to control the reader’s impression of him end up revealing who he really is.