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Hi Iam trying to write good cover letter so I need civil engineering tutor to help me with that and when you write it consider that you are a senior

Hi Iam trying to write good cover letter so I need civil engineering tutor to help me with that and when you write it consider that you are a senior civil engineering student 

this is the job description: Field Engineer - Entry level 

Diaz Construction has one (possibly two) openings for a Field Engineer working in the Boston area.

We are interested in a field engineer to perform layout and an office engineer that can assist in project management. We are a foundation/site development construction company. A field engineer that can speak either Portuguese or Spanish would be a plus. Actively seeking recent graduate who is ready to enter the workforce. 

And this is example and former about how exactly I want it i want to use this business letter example below : 

The Block Form

Ah, business letter format-there are block formats, and indented formats, and modified block formats . . . and who knows what others. To simplify matters, we're demonstrating the block format on this page, one of the two most common formats. For authoritative advice about all the variations, we highly recommend The Gregg Reference Manual, 9th ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001), a great reference tool for workplace communications. There seems to be no consensus about such fine points as whether to skip a line after your return address and before the date: some guidelines suggest that you do; others do not. Let's hope that your business letter succeeds no matter which choice you make!

When you use the block form to write a business letter, all the information is typed flush left, with one-inch margins all around. First provide your own address, then skip a line and provide the date, then skip one more line and provide the inside address of the party to whom the letter is addressed. If you are using letterhead that already provides your address, do not retype that information; just begin with the date. For formal letters, avoid abbreviations where possible.

Skip another line before the salutation, which should be followed by a colon. Then write the body of your letter as illustrated here, with no indentation at the beginnings of paragraphs. Skip lines between paragraphs.

After writing the body of the letter, type the closing, followed by a comma, leave 3 blank lines, then type your name and title (if applicable), all flush left. Sign the letter in the blank space above your typed name. Now doesn't that look professional?

Sincerely,

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