Yes!!! Any word in the English language that is shortened, grammatically has a 'fullstop/period'. after it.
Hence Mister is Mr.
Missis is Mrs.
Ms. a modern invention for divorcees. Notice the stop.
Miss ; No. it is the full word.
Also Messrs. a short Anglicised form of ' monsieurs'. Meaning that it is addressed to several gentleman at the same time.
Also
Dr. Doctor. etc.,
Yes, except Miss doesn't
Ms. is pronounced "Miss" and Mrs. is pronounced "Misses". You pronounce "Ms" as "Miz" and pronounce "Mrs" as "Miss-es"
Ms., Miss, Mr., and Mrs. are all honorific abbreviations. Ms. can be used for a single or married woman. Miss is reserved for single women who have never been married. Mr. is used for an adult man and Mrs. is used for a married or widowed woman.
Yes, i.e. Mr. , Mrs.
You put a period after all of those in the states, however, the British system requires no period after such abbreviations, Mr Mrs Ms .
Mac Uí (Mr) Bean Uí / Mhic (Mrs) Iníon Uí / Iníon Mhic (Miss)
Punctuation after Ms is optional. ======================== I disagree. Punctuation following Mr and Mrs is becoming optional, but I would respectfully submit that it is incorrect to place a period after Ms, because Ms is actually a word and not an abbreviation (as are Mr, for Master, and Mrs, for Mistress).
Mr/Mrs/Miss/Ms.
A prefix on an application for employment may refer to Mr. Miss, Ms. or Mrs. This is a title chosen by the applicant.
-san Mr/Ms/Miss/Mrs -kun Mr -sama Honorable
-san Mr/Ms/Miss/Mrs -kun Mr -sama Honorable
Yes, Mrs. has a period because it is an abbreviation and mrs is not a word. The same holds true for Mr., Dr., and Ms.
Always use Ms. in the exact same way you would use Mr., unless the woman has specified another title such as Miss or Mrs.