yours truly
English edit
Etymology edit
Recorded in the late 1700s as a closing in a letter. Since the mid-1800s for "I", "me", or "myself".[1]
Pronunciation edit
Phrase edit
- (idiomatic) Used to close a note or letter.
- Hypernym: valediction
- Coordinate terms: yours faithfully, yours sincerely
- Please write back soon! Yours truly, Alice.
Usage notes edit
- In British English, yours truly is reserved for informal correspondence. In more formal writing, yours sincerely or yours faithfully are preferred.
Translations edit
closing in a note or letter
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Pronoun edit
- (idiomatic, informal, humorous) I, me, or myself.
- This one was created by yours truly.
- 1951, C.S. Forester (novel), James Agee (screenplay), The African Queen, spoken by Charlie Allnut (Humphrey Bogart):
- Nobody in Africa, but yours truly, can get a good head of steam on the old African Queen.
Derived terms edit
Translations edit
(idiomatic) me or I
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References edit
- ^ “yours truly”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
Further reading edit
- valediction on Wikipedia.Wikipedia