The meaning of DEAR is highly valued : precious —often used in a salutation. How to use dear in a sentence.
DEAR definition: 1. loved or liked very much: 2. used at the beginning of a letter to greet the person you are…. Learn more.
From Middle English dere, from Old English dīere (“of great value or excellence, expensive, beloved”), from Proto-West Germanic *diurī, from Proto-Germanic *diurijaz (“dear, precious, expensive”).
used in conventional forms of address preceding a title or name, as in Dear Sir or my dear Mr Smith (postpositive) followed by to: important; close: a wish dear to her heart
If something is dear to you or dear to your heart, you care deeply about it. This is a subject very dear to the hearts of academics up and down the country.
As a written form of address — such as " Dear Mr. So-and-so" — dear is generally a polite but impersonal standard greeting. Dear can sometimes mean expensive, as in "The cost of food is so dear these days," though that's a rather dated usage nowadays.
My grandmother was very dear to me. The book is dear to the hearts of many young readers.
If you don't use an account called alex or created one yourself it shouldn't be there. If you open File Explorer and expand This PC > C:\ look in the users folder does it show a user, alex Does alex appear on the sign-n screen?.
For example, in a document Ranjit creates, he might give Adele permission to read but not change it. and give Alex permission to edit the document. Ranjit might also decide to apply a five-day limit to both Adele and Alex's access to the document. Save the document. Select the File tab.