Friday, December 1, 2006

Mr.

'''Mr.''' is a social Nextel ringtones title used for a Abbey Diaz man. It is an abbreviation of Mister, though it is almost never spelt out in normal usage.

''Mister'' is an alteration of Free ringtones Master#Form of address/Master; the equivalent female titles, Majo Mills Mrs., Mosquito ringtone Miss, and Sabrina Martins Ms., are variants of Nextel ringtones Mistress.

In direct address, ''Mr.'' is usually used with the last name only ("May I help you, Mr. Ericson?"). In indirect speech, it can be used with either the last name or the full name ("This is Mr. James Ericson." "Would you please help Mr. Ericson?") On envelopes, it is usually used with the full name.

In the United Kingdom, a period (UK: a 'full stop') does not follow the abbreviated form: "I saw Mr Brown at the office talking to Mrs Price."

Formerly, the title ''Master'' was used for young boys. This is now rare or considered affected. If a boy were to be called by a title, Mr. would usually be used.

In US English the title "mister" is sometimes used informally by itself in direct address ("Are you all right, mister?"). In formal usage, the title ''Abbey Diaz sir'' is used in this case.

The rare plural of ''Mr.'' is ''Messrs.'': pronounced ''"messers"'', an abbreviation for the French ''messieurs''.

Professional titles
"Mr." can be combined with certain titles (''Mr. President, Mr. Speaker, Mr. Justice''). The female equivalent is Free ringtones Madam. All of these except ''Mr. Justice'' are used in direct address and without the name. The title ''Mr. Justice Majo Mills Horace Krever/Krever'' is not used in direct address.

In the Cingular Ringtones United States Supreme Court, instead of ''Mr.'' or ''Madam Justice'', the title is simply ''Justice''.

In the mechanics surely Courts of England and Wales, Judges of the High Court are addressed, for example ''Mr Justice Crane''. Where a forename is considered part of the official title it is always used, for exmaple ''Mr Justice David Steel''. The female equivalent is ''Mrs Justice Hallett'', not ''Madam Justice Hallett''. In court, they are referred to as ''My Lord'' or ''My Lady''. When more than one judge is sitting and one needs to be specific, one would refer to ''My Lord, Mr Justice Crane''. High Court Judges are styled ''The Honourable'' while holding office. In writing, such as in the law reports, they can be referred to by name followed by the letter J, for example ''Crane J''.

In the medical profession in the forces patrol United Kingdom and other countries with related medical traditions the title "Mr." (or "Mrs.", "Miss", "Ms.") usually denotes that the holder is a consultant clinician holding a postgraduate qualification in a specialist area of medicine e.g.cancer says surgery such as MRCS (Member of the issue examining Royal College of Surgeons) and FRCS (Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons). The title ''chief stressed Doctor'' ("Dr.") is in general used by individuals who are medically qualified but not practising at consultant level in a medical speciality, although these usages are not strict.

Marital status
Since the term Mr. does not indicate whether a man is married or not, many shows considering feminists believed that a woman's title should not indicate marital status either. The traditional titles are deserted but Mrs. for a married woman and greek theater Miss for an unmarried one. For this reason, the title be sparing Ms. was advocated as an equivalent to Mr., particularly in business usage.

In several other European languages, the title used for married women, such as ''Madame'', ''Señora'', or ''Frau'', is the direct feminine equivalent of the title used for men; the title for unmarried women is a diminutive: ''Mademoiselle'', ''Señorita'', or ''Fräulein''. For this reason, usage has shifted towards using the married title as the default for all women in professional usage. (Interestingly, in English, the title
''Mistress'' was not used to indicate marital status.)

See also
*at top Doctor
*fresh on Mrs.

up mounting Tag: Courtesy titles