You don't use the words Mrs. Mr. or ms. or anything like that
instead at the end you add -san
like:
Fuji-san [which is actually what they call Mt. Fuji]
or Tomimoto-san.
and you don't say it like 'sand'
its more of 'saw' with an 'nn' at the end.
-EDIT-
'Chan' would be for females.
pronunciation: Ch (as in "CHange your clothes") ah (as in "Let's go to the spA") nn (as in "This weighs a toN")
Example:
if a woman's name is something like Toboso Yomi;
(And last names are ordered FIRST.)
Then you would say
"Toboso-Chan"
if it is male you are speaking to,
"Toboso-San".~
Hope it helped, even if just a little. ^^
~san is Mr., Mrs., and Ms. Suzuki-san = Mr. Suzuki
I don't think it really matters. But in society today you normally say Mr. then Mrs. I would do that to be safe.
"Mr" = "Herr". "Mrs" = "Fru".
In Polish, "Mrs" is translated as "Pani."
Yes. It would be appropriate to say "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" for example.
-san Mr/Ms/Miss/Mrs -kun Mr -sama Honorable
-san Mr/Ms/Miss/Mrs -kun Mr -sama Honorable
Mr/Mrs/Miss/Ms.
You would say the male title first, but you need and in there. It should be Mr. and Mrs. John, and Mr. needs a period.
If you were to talk mr. And mrs. Libre what would you say so
They are two people - two is plural, so it should be "Where are Mr and Mrs Jones?"
To say mr <name> in Japanese, you add -san to the name. Like this: Mr. Kobayashi = Kobayashi san