- Prof. Dr. 与 Prof. 有什么区别? - 知乎
Dr ,我见过一位给亚琛的写信,称Dr Prof 。 据悉原因是德国的教授必须是博士,在称呼教授的习惯里,Dr 更近似于一种Mr 的习惯。 Prof Dr 的称呼应该只是将两个并列,类似于国内的作者简介中“教授,博士”的职称学历列出。Prof 则不一定有Dr 的学历。 有一说将
- Which is correct Dr. or Dr? [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
As an Italian, I prefer Mr without the period, because in school we were taught that the period following an abbreviation stood for "following letters omitted", but the r in Mr and in Dr is the last letter of Mister and Doctor, so no letter following "r" is omitted I think that the British usage tends to conform to this "European" (Latin?) rule
- Is Dr. the same as Doctor? Or how to distinguish these two?
"Dr " is an abbreviation for "doctor", and either can be used in most situations However, it is not idiomatic to say, eg, "Frank is a Dr at Memorial Hospital", or "Joe is sick so I called the Dr " Rather, "doctor" is generally spelled out in such cases, where the term is used not as a title but a position or trade –
- How to indicate possession when using abbreviation Dr.
Dr , on the other hand, is an honorific Like Mr , Mrs , or Prof , it isn't meant to be used as a noun at all To answer more directly, there is no proper way to use the abbreviated form to indicate possesion, as it isn't a noun
- 为什么有的教授的title是Prof有的是Dr? - 知乎
所以看德语区高校的网站,他们的教授的名字前通常都是Prof Dr ,如果有两个博士学位的话,那就加两个Dr ,如果是Doctor of Engineering的话,也得给你写清楚是Dr -Ing,如果是工程师的话,再给你加个Ir,或者还有啥title,都能给你加上。
- Terms for name prefixes Ms. , Mr. vs Prof. , Dr.
Dr, Prof, Revd etc Background is that I have to store this data in a database for both english and non-english persons, with some non-english languages requiring words from both groups to be present at the same time (as opposed to english where i e you would use either Dr or Mr , but not both of them together)
- Use Google Drive for desktop
Sync files to Drive Sync files and folders to Drive for Desktop For this same video with audio descriptions, go to Sync files and folders to Drive for Desktop
- What is the name of this type of word: Mr. , Ms. , Dr. ?
@Marcin: Perhaps I am I know that there are times when "Mister" is either a portion of a style or a complete style, but in that case it is associated with some position (e g certain clergy positions, or some official government positions in the United states such as "Mr President", "Madam Speaker", etc), while the generic honorific we tend to say during conversation to anyone would not thus
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