inside feeling and when she came in front of you that time you get some romantic feeling on her
Mrs -we used when the woman is married; Ms -we use when we do not know whether the woman is married or not, and we do not want to hurt her.
In most cases, if you know that a woman is married you would call her Mrs., and if you do not know whether she is married, or if you know that she is not married, you would call her Ms. Also, it is polite to address people as they wish to be addressed, so even a married woman could be addressed as Ms. if that is how she wishes to be known.
If you are unaware whether a woman is married or not, use Ms. If it is a man, obviously, Mr. is used in all cases. so Ms. for a woman, and Mr. for a man.
"Mrs" means the woman is (or has been) married. Ms" means either of the above but the woman prefers not to reveal which, or is used if you are addressing her in writing and don't know whether she is a "Mrs" or a "Miss".
When she divorces her husband!
#1 You are her husband.
No, as far as we know he remains married to the same woman (Jill Rhodes); he has been married to her since 1993.
It does not!
Mrs. is a title of respect that may be used to address a married woman. Ms. is preferable, especially if you do not know what the woman's preferred title is, or if you do not know the marital status of the woman.
You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.
i do't know sorry
French does not have an equivalent of the neutral female title "Ms." If you do not know whether a woman is married, use Mademoiselle for a young woman and Madame for older women. As for the approximate age where you should make the cutoff, I'm not sure--maybe 30? That is not true at all. France does not really use Ms. most women after a certain age become Madame whether they are married or not, but Quebec does have something - Madelle. I don't know the short form for it, I am looking for it myself!