- LEO - Michigan Rehabilitation Services
MRS provides vocational rehabilitation services for eligible individuals with disabilities, consistent with their unique strengths, resources, priorities, concerns, abilities, capabilities, interests, and informed choice, to prepare for and engage in employment and achieve economic self-sufficiency
- Mr. , Mrs. , Miss, and Ms. : What They Mean And How To Use Them
Generally speaking, it is considered proper etiquette to use Mrs to refer to married women, Miss to refer to unmarried women and young girls, and Ms to refer to a woman of unknown marital status or when marital status is irrelevant
- 2025 MRS Fall Meeting Exhibit
MRS is an incredible community of scholars, innovators, and engineers driven to have a positive impact on the world through new materials Being an MRS Member gives me access to forefront research spanning materials synthesis, characterization, and applications
- Mrs. - Wikipedia
Mrs originated as a contraction of the honorific Mistress (the feminine of Mister or Master) which was originally applied to both married and unmarried women in the upper class Writers who used Mrs for unmarried women include Daniel Defoe, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, and Samuel Johnson
- Modified Rankin Scale for Neurologic Disability - MDCalc
The Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) measures degree of disability dependence after a stroke
- Learn the Difference: “Miss,” “Mrs. ,” “Ms. ,” and “Mx. ”
Mrs is a traditional title used for a married woman Miss is a traditional title used for an unmarried woman Mx is a title that indicates neither marital status nor gender Miss, when attached to a name, is a traditional title of respect for a girl or unmarried woman
- “Misses” or “Missus” or “Mrs. ”—Which to use? | Sapling
Explanation of the difference between misses missus mrs with example usage of each in context
- Ms. vs. Mrs. vs. Miss | Difference Pronunciation - Scribbr
Mrs is a title used for a married woman The more neutral title Ms can be used instead for a woman whose marital status is unknown or irrelevant or who expresses a preference for this mode of address
|