Jr. for example: Thomas Richardson, Jr.
The abbreviation Jr. (short for junior) uses a period, just like any other abbreviation. There is usually also a comma between the junior and the last name, i.e., John Smith, Jr.
If you want your son to be a "junior", you'll name him after his father. For instance, if his father's name is "John Lee Doe", your son would be named "John Lee Doe, Jr." Then you could call him "Junior" for short.
that's a pretty awesome name && it means the young child in latin
Yes, when Senior dies, Junior can take the suffix of Senior if there is another of the same name (a son of Junior, for example) to take the Junior suffix. Otherwise Junior can simply drop the suffix altogether, or continue to use Junior if his professional identity, for example, is strongly tied to that naming convention.
From my name and my name is Michayla Dean Baxter people and i go to benton junior high.!
The correct way to write "Junior" after someone's surname is to capitalize both the surname and "Junior" itself, with a comma placed before "Junior." For example, if the individual's surname is Smith, it would be written as "Smith, Junior."
[lastname], [firstname] jr.
No, there should not be a comma after the name before "Junior." The correct format is to have the name followed directly by "Junior" without any punctuation in between.
it means your emo
No, "JR" is the correct abbreviation for junior, typically used to denote a son with the same name as his father.
all you have to do is put an @ sign before you write their name and it ill show you a list and just click the persons name.
You say "I write my name in the snow".
Name Here III
The correct way to write the genus and species name of the domestic dog is Canis lupus familiaris.
If your name is Junior, then no. Junior Jr.?
The correct way to write the scientific name of the garden pea is Pisum sativum.
he is a junior