A colon is used as in the following example:
To Whom It May Concern:
Yes. It should be --- To Whom It May Concern
Use colon. To Whom It May Co ncer n:
To whom it may concern in Tagalog: sa may kinauukulan
'To Whom It May Concern' is considered to be a sub-title of a letter. Much as 'Dear Sir' and 'Yours Sincerely' they are the accepted structure.
It means that you're not sure of the recipie nt of the letter or the full name of the recipie nt so you're addressi ng it to a nyo ne who has to deal with your letter.
Colon
Yes. It should be --- To Whom It May Concern
to whom it may concern
To whom this may concern
When you do not know who will be receiving the letter.
To whom it may concern
'To whom it may concern' is right. 'To whom soever it may concern' is wrong.
Whether in writing or in person, address a judge as "your honor". Do not use "to whom it may concern" unless you have no idea who will be reading your letter.
Yes.
Address it "To whom it may concern"
To Whom It May Concern.
To whomsoever it may concern is a letter of notice on a specific issue for specific person while -to whom it may concern is a letter of reference to someone known for anyone not known.