The accomplished letter-writer; or, universal correspondent. Containing familiar letters on the most common occasions in life. Also a variety of more elegant letters for examples and Improvement of Style, from the best modern Authors, together with many Originals, on business, duty, amusement, affection, courtship, marriage, friendship, and Other Subjects. To which is prefixed a compendious grammar of the English tongue, also A Table of the Clerk-Like Contraction of Words, for the Dispatch of Business; and The proper Mode of addressing Persons of all Ranks, either in Writing or Discourse; and some necessary Orthographical Directions. With a Selection of Some beautiful Poetical Epistles, and various Forms of polite Messages.

Date:
1779
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Publication/Creation

London : printed for T. Caslon, in Stationers-Court, and J. Ashburner, in Kendal, 1779.

Physical description

xii,252p. ; 120.

References note

ESTC T63331
Alston, III.346

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Thomson Gale, 2003. (Eighteenth century collections online). Available via the World Wide Web. Access limited by licensing agreements.

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