Road rules2 mins ago
Signing a letter for someone else
18 Answers
This is probably not the correct section but didn't know where to post it.
Please settle a office argument (handbags at dawn). When you sign a letter on someone elses behalf you write pp in the 'margin'.
1. What does pp stand for, and;
2. At what name do you write pp at, ie if you are signing for someone else do you write it before your signature or before their name.
Many thanks,
warpig1
Please settle a office argument (handbags at dawn). When you sign a letter on someone elses behalf you write pp in the 'margin'.
1. What does pp stand for, and;
2. At what name do you write pp at, ie if you are signing for someone else do you write it before your signature or before their name.
Many thanks,
warpig1
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by warpig1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I thought the same as Goofy but have now looked it up. Apparently it comes from Latin per procurationem - 'through the agency of' - which in effect means 'by', so you should put it before your own name, not that of the person you're signing for. However, says my OED, it's now widely taken to mean 'on behalf of' and so is commonly put before the other person's name.
I guess that means either way is acceptable. Not sure if that will save your handbags or not.
I guess that means either way is acceptable. Not sure if that will save your handbags or not.
well, I suppose it might be bellaporcauna since warpig seems to be female, or perhaps bellaporcaI (that's a Roman numeral rather than an L)
here's one:
http://www.cerberusart.com/images/joeart/warpi g.jpg
here's one:
http://www.cerberusart.com/images/joeart/warpi g.jpg