How to Use correspondence in a Sentence
correspondence
noun- Note the correspondence of each number to a location on the map.
- The two men began a correspondence that would continue throughout their lives.
- A book of the author's personal correspondence was published early last year.
- A formal tone is always used in business correspondence.
- Sometimes there is little correspondence between the way a word is spelled and the way it is pronounced in English.
- Sometimes there are few correspondences between spelling and pronunciation.
- E-mail correspondence has become extremely important for modern businesses.
- They communicated by telephone and correspondence.
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All the correspondence went to the clerk's office, and was not sent on to the judge.
— Bruce Vielmetti, Journal Sentinel, 1 Nov. 2022 -
Some kinds of correspondence must be kept for at least a year.
— Amanda Gokee, BostonGlobe.com, 27 Mar. 2023 -
This is not the first public correspondence that the Band and the oil giant have had this year.
— Caitlin Looby, Journal Sentinel, 11 July 2024 -
That is where the correspondence came to an end, Ms. Gadar and Mr. Gallagher said.
— Katherine Rosman, New York Times, 14 Oct. 2022 -
So the showrunning requires a lot of thought, and just a lot of correspondence with the 200 people plus that work on the show.
— ELLE, 11 Apr. 2022 -
Buckingham Palace's correspondence team has been hard at work since the death of the Queen.
— Janine Henni, Peoplemag, 20 Oct. 2022 -
Carr explained in the Q&A that the fans interviewed for the film and who shared their correspondence agreed to do so to help catch the culprit.
— Karen Bliss, Variety, 16 Sep. 2024 -
Clock said the city has not received any formal correspondence from the state.
— Tammy Murga, San Diego Union-Tribune, 9 Jan. 2024 -
On the other side of the correspondence is the spectrum of frequencies of the sine waves — that is, their pitches.
— Erica Klarreich, Quanta Magazine, 19 July 2024 -
Even in his private correspondence, Baldwin believed in the power of the word to change the world.
— Vann R. Newkirk Ii, The Atlantic, 2 Aug. 2024 -
But the correspondences also show the gap left by their absence.
— Lovia Gyarkye, The Hollywood Reporter, 8 Sep. 2023 -
Here and there on the walls were old Trouser Press covers and correspondence.
— Nick Paumgarten, The New Yorker, 15 Jan. 2024 -
The telegram to Friar Park provides the coda to the correspondence.
— Guy Martin, Forbes, 28 Feb. 2024 -
The scene is spartan: a cot, some books, a messy pile of correspondence, a collection of chintzy piggy banks.
— John Semley, WIRED, 16 Feb. 2023 -
In 1962, Jimmy Carter ran for a seat in the Georgia state Senate, and his wife took charge of all his campaign correspondence.
— Kevin Sullivan, Washington Post, 19 Nov. 2023 -
Suzanne and Aimé Césaire have this long correspondence with him.
— Georg Szalai, The Hollywood Reporter, 17 Oct. 2024 -
Phone calls go unanswered and correspondence takes almost a year to process.
— Wsj Opinion, WSJ, 18 Mar. 2022 -
Later, the conversation turned to the more than 50 years of correspondence from fans that Blume preserved and are now archived at Yale.
— Angelique Jackson, Variety, 22 Apr. 2023 -
Clearly that letter wasn’t your run-of-the-mill correspondence.
— Dominic Patten, Deadline, 31 Oct. 2024 -
The agency sends out warning letters from time to time, and an up-to-date list of all their correspondence can be found on their website.
— Nick Rogan, Discover Magazine, 9 Dec. 2022 -
What has industry insiders aghast over this conflict is the nature of the correspondence.
— Matt Donnelly, Variety, 23 Dec. 2024 -
Prince Harry and Meghan aren't the only parents of their generation to refrain from showing their children's faces in online correspondence.
— Janine Henni, People.com, 16 Dec. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'correspondence.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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