All. The. Time. In fact this seems to be the only way in which it flows as I would like :)
Hehehe. I for one, am a big fan of the in-text colon: an important part of any complex sentence. Grossly underutilised, in my view. Grossly. :p
I could be wrong, but I think you could actually use a colon there.
This is the rule :)
Lord Halifax did enter the room. He sauntered in, much in the manner of his own movement, like a beguiled deer. Stenton, his manservant, was...
Post one or two and we can have a look!
I would still close a to whom it may concern letter; I hadn't heard the notion that they weren't "letters" before. Recommendation letters for...
Simply, uhebrubrehbr.
Actually, I did pause on the comma. NZ, Aus, as far as I'm aware the UK and other Commonwealth countries wouldn't use a colon, I'm not sure about...
Yeah it is odd. Though drafting letters for others is pretty normal I would say. Back in my early legal days I used to do it all the time for...
Ginger Coffey works for me.
Like all research, Google is probably a good start. "London financial district 1950" or something like that could work. My knowledge of the City...
I think to sound genuinely English you need some kind of title. I'm thinking Baron. Then you need an evil sounding name (which are the coolest)...
Separate names with a comma.