John Jones III can change to John Jones Sr once the first Senior and Junior die, but he does not have to. He can remain John Jones III all his life.
Senior- for the father Junior- for the son III- for the grandson
The system of calling people Junior and Senior is completely separate from the system of calling them First, Second, Third, etc.Since someone who is "Junior" is at least the second person to carry a particular name, his son cannot be "the First". The son of Junior is at least "The Third."
Junior yr - 3th yr Senior yr- 4th(final) yr & Junior/Senior CGPA means the avg of third and fourth yr
the 1st year is Freshman. The second year is sophomore. The third year is junior and the fourth year is senior.
If the senior father is still alive you can name the new son with a third on end. It would go like; John Henry Smith, III ( third)
Senior,Junior. and "THE THIRD"
I am a 2nd and not a junior. I have the same name as my Grandfather. If I were to have the same name as my father I would be a junior. If I give my son the same as myself he would be a junior and a 3rd.
If you are using the term, Junior, there is no value in your son doing so too. He should be the Third. If your father is no longer living, you can stop being Junior, and become Senior. Then your son can be called Junior. But that is a matter of choice; no one sets any requirements on this. Remember, the basic purpose of both Senior/Junior and First/Second/Third, is to let two people with the same name be readily differentiated when they are being talked or written about.
No. (Not unless that 'junior' is graduating early, in which case they'd actually be termed a senior, even if this is only their third year of high school... so, still, no.)
1.Freshman Year 2.Sophomore Year 3.Junior Year 4.Senior Year
Sophomores are second-year students in either high school or college. Freshman is the first-year label, sophomore is the second, junior is the third, and senior is the fourth. This is assuming you are attending for four years.
Having the JS Prom symbolizes that the third year students are sntering into a new level which means they are now young adults.