Is it appropriate to use the sentence “Greetings of the Day” in a formal email instead of Good morning?

I always get e-mail in a comment with the subject line “Greetings of the day!” instead of the sentence “Good morning” or “Good afternoon”. Is it a good practice to use this symbol in formal emails and letters?

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Is the “Greetings of the Day” texting on an email spam? If I’m e-mailing someone I know, what should I start with? If I am e-mailing someone that I don’t know, then I might treat it like writing a letter and start with “Dear Mr. Jones”.

If you want my email address to be “Readed,” feel free to email me a message with information at the bottom of the page. If you like my email address and don’t like my e-mail address, do it? If you send me spam, please do begin with “Thanks for your reply” and I’ll know not to read any further and press the delete button.

Do I receive anything like this in my emails? I do get a few and nice e-mails. There’s nothing wrong with this. What does Greetings of the day sound like?

Answered on March 1, 2021.
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When do you use “formal” email? Email is informal, and generally doesn’t follow the rules of formal correspondence.

If you’re referring to email messages conveying information of a “serious” or formal nature (e.g. , business correspondence rather than casual conversation), it is probably better to keep it concise and just get to the point, leaving out fluff like “Good morning” for those who don’t know when the message will be read).

Why use the title “Greetings of the day” as it is so vague that people will associate it with spam. If you do use generic blather, then “July 20th” is

now a message to people who opted to read the opening.

Answered on March 1, 2021.
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