Question says it all, we need to write a formal letter in English class (I'm not a native speaker) and I need to know when you use a dot after Mr, Mrs and Ms.
Thank you in advance!
Seven answers:
nnucklehedd
2013-04-10 06:44:37 UTC
Since they are abbreviations for titles Mister, Missus, etc., it is an issue of grammar and should ALWAYS be followed by a "."
Luis
2013-04-10 07:27:48 UTC
You use a dot after Mr Mrs and ms every time you write them because they are abbreviation. Like Mr. means Mister and Ms. means Misses.
?
2013-04-10 06:30:42 UTC
It's a matter of style, not grammar. Generally, in American English, a dot is placed after Mr, Mrs and Ms, while in British English the dot isn't used.
anonymous
2013-04-10 06:33:48 UTC
He's right. The dot is used to signify abbreviation (like Mr. for Mister).
?
2016-11-07 03:59:37 UTC
that's a controversy of 'residing house variety' - the format required by skill of whoever you're writing for. classes on abbreviated titles was once classic - Mr. Smith, Mrs. Smith, Ms. Smith, etc - yet over the final 40 years or so, it has develop into an increasing variety of the convention to no longer use them (the comparable way that we no longer end lines of an handle on an envelope with commas) even in formal writing. i comprehend it relatively is not a lot use - yet circulate by skill of notwithstanding convention you have been instructed for sophistication. Your instructor would possibly anticipate you to apply them; yet interior the real international, they are elective, if no longer somewhat archaic in variety.
Mark
2013-04-10 06:33:04 UTC
Technically those are abbreviations so you use a period but it is not always done except in a formal letter.
House On The Hill
2013-04-10 06:33:33 UTC
They used to show they were abbreviations. Since there was no such word as mister or missus they got dropped.
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