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Prof. Dr. 与 Prof. 有什么区别? - 知乎 Dr 是doctor的简写,即博士(最高学位。 且必须是取得该头衔后才能称呼。 在读博士是 Doctoral Candidate)。 by the way:博士后不是学位的一种,只是在某处工作的博士的类职称而已。 德国人通常称呼一位教授的方式也不是Prof Dr ,我见过一位给亚琛的写信,称Dr
personal names - Referring to professors as Dr. in news articles and . . . In places like university websites, the title "Dr " is typically reserved for those who aren't professors, like postdocs or industry national lab scientists On the other hand, in most writing outside of academic circles, especially news articles, it seems common to see professors referred to as "Dr "
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
Terms for name prefixes Ms. , Mr. vs Prof. , Dr. I'm searching for two words that adequately describe and differentiate between the following two categories groups of words, given they exist in english: Ms, Mr, Mrs, Miss etc Dr, Prof, Revd etc
Is it proper to omit periods after honorifics (Mr, Mrs, Dr)? 1 I think it depends on the style guide American Medical Association style is to omit periods in all abbreviations except middle initials, so: eg, ie, vs, Dr, Mr, etc This is probably just the magazine's house style
word usage - Why are doctors addressed as Mr. in the UK? - English . . . 4 In the US most physicians, surgeons and dentists are addressed as "doctor" Very few other professionals receive the same title In the UK, however, surgeons and dentists seem to prefer to be referred to as Mr or Ms If that is true, why? And who is addressed as Dr in the UK? Those who hold doctoral degrees only?