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Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing

A Wisdom Archive on Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing

A selection of articles related to Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing

More material related to Use Of Courtesy Titles And Honorifics In Professional Writing can be found here:
Index of Articles
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Use Of Courtesy Titles An...
Highness, Highness - Colonial use, Highness - Other uses, Highness - Variations, Highness - Western European tradition, Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing

ARTICLES RELATED TO Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing - Comparison of publications

Wire services Associated Press: The AP does not use courtesy titles except in obituaries, direct quotations, or when a story on a family may cause confusion without the use of courtesy titles. Instead, using the first and last names on first reference and the last name on later references is preferred. The AP Stylebook advises that the first reference to a member of the clergy should include a capitalized title: The Reverend John Smith on first reference and Smith or the reverend on every reference th ...

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Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing, Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing - Titles honorifics and styles, Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing - Comparison of publications, Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing - Styles used sometimes, Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing - Styles not used

Read more here: » Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing - Comparison of publications

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Serene Highness - German usage

The style Serene Highness was mainly used by the children and grandchildren of the reigning dukes and princes of the small German states that survived after the collapse of the Holy Roman Empire. It was also given to several morganatic branches of German ruling family. Queen Mary, the consort of King George V used the style Her Serene Highness as a Princess of Teck. (The dukes and princes of Teck were a branch of the Royal House of Wurtemberg). In the Republic of Venice, also called the Serene ...

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Serene Highness, Serene Highness - Monaco, Serene Highness - German usage, Serene Highness - France

Read more here: » Serene Highness: Encyclopedia II - Serene Highness - German usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Highness - Western European tradition

These abstractions arose in great profusion in the Roman empire, both of the East and West (subject to a now very confusion inflation and devaluation of titles, but at any given time rather rigidly ruled by imperial commands, rendering the official hierarchy of offices), and highness is to be directly traced to the altitudo and celsitudo of the Latin and the iah7Xr,~ of the Greek emperors. Like other exorbitant and swelling attributes of the time, they were conferred on ruling princes generally but also often attached to variou ...

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Highness, Highness - Western European tradition, Highness - Colonial use, Highness - Other uses, Highness - Variations

Read more here: » Highness: Encyclopedia II - Highness - Western European tradition

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - British usage

The Honourable - Entitlement. In the United Kingdom, all sons and daughters of viscounts and barons and the younger sons of earls are styled with this prefix. (The daughters and younger sons of dukes and marquesses and the daughters of earls have the higher style of Lord or Lady before their first names, and the eldest sons of dukes, marquesses and earls are known by one of their father or mother's subsidiary titles.) The style is only a courtesy one, however, and on legal documents they are describ ...

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The Honourable, The Honourable - British usage, The Honourable - Entitlement, The Honourable - Usage, The Honourable - American usage, The Honourable - Australian usage, The Honourable - Canadian usage, The Honourable - Hong Kong usage, The Honourable - New Zealand usage

Read more here: » The Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - British usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Excellency - American usage

In the United States, the form "Excellency" was specifically denied to the President, with "Mr./Madam President" or "The Honorable ..." being the only legally accepted forms. However, in many foreign countries and in UN protocol the President of the United States is usually referred to as "His Excellency." In New England, governors have retained the honorific "Excellency," following traditional British colonial practice, though it is rarely used. The six New England states are: Massachusetts Rhode Island Connecticut New Ham ...

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Excellency, Excellency - American usage, Excellency - Commonwealth usage, Excellency - Other countries

Read more here: » Excellency: Encyclopedia II - Excellency - American usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Examples of styles

Style manner of address - In law courts. The Honorable (abbreviation Hon., oral address Your Honor) — Judges of Commonwealth countries and Justices in the United States Oral address Your Worship - Justices of the Peace (Magistrates) in the United Kingdom Style manner of address - In diplomacy. His Excellency (abbreviation HE, oral address Your Excellency) — most Ambassadors, High Commisioners and Permanent Representatives to International Organizations The Honorable (oral ad ...

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Style manner of address, Style manner of address - Examples of styles, Style manner of address - In law courts, Style manner of address - In diplomacy, Style manner of address - In religion, Style manner of address - In monarchies, Style manner of address - In republics, Style manner of address - In the United Kingdom, Style manner of address - In Canada, Style manner of address - In Australia, Style manner of address - In the Philippines, Style manner of address - Local government, Style manner of address - United States governors, Style manner of address - Political titles used as styles, Style manner of address - Styles existing through marriage, Style manner of address - Termination of styles, Style manner of address - Former styles, Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs, Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols, Style manner of address - Self-styled, Style manner of address - Footnote

Read more here: » Style manner of address: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Examples of styles

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - British usage

The Honourable - Entitlement. In the United Kingdom, all sons and daughters of viscounts and barons and the younger sons of earls are styled with this prefix. (The daughters and younger sons of dukes and marquesses and the daughters of earls have the higher style of Lord or Lady before their first names, and the eldest sons of dukes, marquesses and earls are known by one of their father or mother's subsidiary titles.) The style is only a courtesy one, however, and on legal documents they are describ ...

See also:

The Honourable, The Honourable - British usage, The Honourable - Entitlement, The Honourable - Usage, The Honourable - American usage, The Honourable - Australian usage, The Honourable - Canadian usage, The Honourable - Hong Kong usage, The Honourable - New Zealand usage, The Honourable - Manx usage

Read more here: » The Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - British usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Outside the United Kingdom

Generally within the Commonwealth, ministers and judges are The Honourable unless they are appointed to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom, in which case they are The Right Honourable. Such persons generally include Prime Ministers and judges of the Court of Appeal of New Zealand, and several other Commonwealth prime ministers. The Right Honourable - Australia. In Australia some Premiers of the Australian colonies in the 19th century were appointed members of the UK Privy Council and wer ...

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The Right Honourable, The Right Honourable - Entitlement, The Right Honourable - Corporate entities, The Right Honourable - Use of the honorific, The Right Honourable - Outside the United Kingdom, The Right Honourable - Australia, The Right Honourable - Canada, The Right Honourable - Ireland, The Right Honourable - New Zealand

Read more here: » The Right Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Outside the United Kingdom

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Examples of styles

Style manner of address - In law courts. The Honorable (abbreviation Hon., oral address Your Honor) — Judges of Commonwealth countries and Justices in the United States Oral address Your Worship - Justices of the Peace (Magistrates) in the United Kingdom Style manner of address - In diplomacy. His Excellency (abbreviation HE, oral address Your Excellency) — most Ambassadors, High Commisioners and Permanent Representatives to International Organizations The Honorable (oral ad ...

See also:

Style manner of address, Style manner of address - Examples of styles, Style manner of address - In law courts, Style manner of address - In diplomacy, Style manner of address - In religion, Style manner of address - In monarchies, Style manner of address - In republics, Style manner of address - In the United Kingdom, Style manner of address - In Canada, Style manner of address - In Australia, Style manner of address - Local government, Style manner of address - United States governors, Style manner of address - Political titles used as styles, Style manner of address - Styles existing through marriage, Style manner of address - Termination of styles, Style manner of address - Former styles, Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs, Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols, Style manner of address - Self-styled, Style manner of address - Footnote

Read more here: » Style manner of address: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Examples of styles

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Corporate entities

The prefix is also added to the name of various corporate entities, e.g.: The Right Honourable the Lords Spiritual and Temporal (of the United Kingdom &c.) in Parliament Assembled (the House of Lords); The Right Honourable the Knights, Citizens and Burgesses (now usually the Honourable the Commons of the United Kingdom &c.) in Parliament Assembled (the House of Commons); and The Right Honourable the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty (the Board of Admiralty) The Right Honourable the Lords of ...

See also:

The Right Honourable, The Right Honourable - Entitlement, The Right Honourable - Corporate entities, The Right Honourable - Use of the honorific, The Right Honourable - Outside the United Kingdom, The Right Honourable - Australia, The Right Honourable - Canada, The Right Honourable - Ireland, The Right Honourable - New Zealand

Read more here: » The Right Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Corporate entities

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols

Styles were often among the range of symbols that surrounded figures of high office. Everything from the manner of address to the behaviour of a person on meeting that personage was surrounded by traditional symbols. Monarchs were to be bowed to by men and curtsied to by women. Senior clergy, particularly in the Roman Catholic Church, were to have their rings (the symbol of their authority) kissed by lay persons while they were on bended knee, while cardinals in an act of homage at the papal corona ...

See also:

Style manner of address, Style manner of address - Examples of styles, Style manner of address - In law courts, Style manner of address - In diplomacy, Style manner of address - In religion, Style manner of address - In monarchies, Style manner of address - In republics, Style manner of address - In the United Kingdom, Style manner of address - In Canada, Style manner of address - In Australia, Style manner of address - In the Philippines, Style manner of address - Local government, Style manner of address - United States governors, Style manner of address - Political titles used as styles, Style manner of address - Styles existing through marriage, Style manner of address - Termination of styles, Style manner of address - Former styles, Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs, Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols, Style manner of address - Self-styled, Style manner of address - Footnote

Read more here: » Style manner of address: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - American usage

In the United States, the prefix The Honorable is used for a large number of high ranking (and not so high ranking) government officials, including: The President and Vice President of the United States Members of the Congress and state legislatures Members of the Cabinet Senior officers of executive departments Ambassadors Supreme Court Justices, Federal judges and magistrate judges Governors of States of the Union Mayors of cities City council members State and municipal judges and magistrates Elected part ...

See also:

The Honourable, The Honourable - British usage, The Honourable - Entitlement, The Honourable - Usage, The Honourable - American usage, The Honourable - Australian usage, The Honourable - Canadian usage, The Honourable - Hong Kong usage, The Honourable - New Zealand usage

Read more here: » The Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - American usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Entitlement

People entitled to the prefix in a personal capacity are: Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom and the Privy Council of Northern Ireland This includes all current and former members of the Cabinet of the United Kingdom, which is a committee of the Privy Council; Barons, viscounts and earls (marquesses are "The Most Honourable" and dukes are "The Most Noble" or "His Grace", and, if Privy Councillors, retain these higher styles); and The holders of certain offices of state in some Commonwealth realms (e.g. in Canada, the Governo ...

See also:

The Right Honourable, The Right Honourable - Entitlement, The Right Honourable - Corporate entities, The Right Honourable - Use of the honorific, The Right Honourable - Outside the United Kingdom, The Right Honourable - Australia, The Right Honourable - Canada, The Right Honourable - Ireland, The Right Honourable - New Zealand

Read more here: » The Right Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Entitlement

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - Australian usage

In Australia, all ministers in Commonwealth and state (but not territory) governments are entitled to be styled The Honourable. Except in New South Wales and South Australia, the title is retained for life because it recognises that their appointment to the relevant executive council (when they first become a minister) is an appointment for life, and the person technically remains "an executive councillor-on-call". In New South Wales and South Australia the premier can advise the Queen to grant former ministers the title for life. The ...

See also:

The Honourable, The Honourable - British usage, The Honourable - Entitlement, The Honourable - Usage, The Honourable - American usage, The Honourable - Australian usage, The Honourable - Canadian usage, The Honourable - Hong Kong usage, The Honourable - New Zealand usage

Read more here: » The Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - Australian usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs

General tradition indicates that where a monarch has been deposed but has not abdicated, they retain the use of their style and title for the duration of their lifetime, but both die with them. Hence Greece's deposed king is still technically His Majesty King Constantine II of the Hellenes, as a personal title, not a constitutional office, since the abolition of the monarchy by the Hellenic Republic in 1974. Similarly, until his death the last King of Italy, King Umberto II, was technically entitled to be called His Majesty ...

See also:

Style manner of address, Style manner of address - Examples of styles, Style manner of address - In law courts, Style manner of address - In diplomacy, Style manner of address - In religion, Style manner of address - In monarchies, Style manner of address - In republics, Style manner of address - In the United Kingdom, Style manner of address - In Canada, Style manner of address - In Australia, Style manner of address - In the Philippines, Style manner of address - Local government, Style manner of address - United States governors, Style manner of address - Political titles used as styles, Style manner of address - Styles existing through marriage, Style manner of address - Termination of styles, Style manner of address - Former styles, Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs, Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols, Style manner of address - Self-styled, Style manner of address - Footnote

Read more here: » Style manner of address: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - Canadian usage

In Canada, the following people are entitled to the style The Honourable (or l'honorable in French) for life: Members of the Canadian Senate Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada Provincial Lieutenant-Governors In addition, some people are entitled to the style while in office only: The Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons Judges of the Supreme Court of Canada and other superior courts Members of provincial Executive Councils while holding office Speakers of pro ...

See also:

The Honourable, The Honourable - British usage, The Honourable - Entitlement, The Honourable - Usage, The Honourable - American usage, The Honourable - Australian usage, The Honourable - Canadian usage, The Honourable - Hong Kong usage, The Honourable - New Zealand usage

Read more here: » The Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Honourable - Canadian usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Use of the honorific

The honorific is normally only used on the front of envelopes and other written documents: for example, The Right Honourable Tony Blair, MP is otherwise referred to simply as "Mr Blair". In the House of Commons, members refer to each other as "the honourable member for ..." or "the right honourable member for ..." depending upon whether or not they are Privy Counsellors. However the title "the honourable member" is ...

See also:

The Right Honourable, The Right Honourable - Entitlement, The Right Honourable - Corporate entities, The Right Honourable - Use of the honorific, The Right Honourable - Outside the United Kingdom, The Right Honourable - Australia, The Right Honourable - Canada, The Right Honourable - Ireland, The Right Honourable - New Zealand

Read more here: » The Right Honourable: Encyclopedia II - The Right Honourable - Use of the honorific

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Excellency - Commonwealth usage

The form "Excellency" has never been used to refer to or address The Queen or any earlier British monarch, in any of the countries where that monarchy is recognized. The mistaken belief that it can or should be used may arise either from (a) errors of protocol in other countries, or at the UN; or (b) confusion due to embellishments to the "Majestic" style, e.g. on Acts of Parliament, "Excellent Majesty", or on passports, "Britannic Majesty". Otherwise the style "Excellency" is generally accorded to the current holders of the following ...

See also:

Excellency, Excellency - American usage, Excellency - Commonwealth usage, Excellency - Other countries

Read more here: » Excellency: Encyclopedia II - Excellency - Commonwealth usage

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs

General tradition indicates that where a monarch has been deposed but has not abdicated, they retain the use of their style and title for the duration of their lifetime, but both die with them. Hence Greece's deposed king is still technically His Majesty King Constantine II of the Hellenes, as a personal title, not a constitutional office, since the abolition of the monarchy by the Hellenic Republic in 1974. Similarly, until his death the last King of Italy, King Umberto II, was technically entitled to be called His Majesty ...

See also:

Style manner of address, Style manner of address - Examples of styles, Style manner of address - In law courts, Style manner of address - In diplomacy, Style manner of address - In religion, Style manner of address - In monarchies, Style manner of address - In republics, Style manner of address - In the United Kingdom, Style manner of address - In Canada, Style manner of address - In Australia, Style manner of address - Local government, Style manner of address - United States governors, Style manner of address - Political titles used as styles, Style manner of address - Styles existing through marriage, Style manner of address - Termination of styles, Style manner of address - Former styles, Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs, Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols, Style manner of address - Self-styled, Style manner of address - Footnote

Read more here: » Style manner of address: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs

Use of courtesy titles and honorifics in professional writing: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols

Styles were often among the range of symbols that surrounded figures of high office. Everything from the manner of address to the behaviour of a person on meeting that personage was surrounded by traditional symbols. Monarchs were to be bowed to by men and curtsied to by women. Senior clergy, particularly in the Roman Catholic Church, were to have their rings (the symbol of their authority) kissed by lay persons while they were on bended knee, while cardinals in an act of homage at the papal corona ...

See also:

Style manner of address, Style manner of address - Examples of styles, Style manner of address - In law courts, Style manner of address - In diplomacy, Style manner of address - In religion, Style manner of address - In monarchies, Style manner of address - In republics, Style manner of address - In the United Kingdom, Style manner of address - In Canada, Style manner of address - In Australia, Style manner of address - Local government, Style manner of address - United States governors, Style manner of address - Political titles used as styles, Style manner of address - Styles existing through marriage, Style manner of address - Termination of styles, Style manner of address - Former styles, Style manner of address - Styles and titles of deposed monarchs, Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols, Style manner of address - Self-styled, Style manner of address - Footnote

Read more here: » Style manner of address: Encyclopedia II - Style manner of address - Other parallel symbols

More material related to Use Of Courtesy Titles And Honorifics In Professional Writing can be found here:
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