If the doctor were a Good and Reputable doctor, they would be treating All their patients with the utmost care and quality of professional care, no matter who is 'doctoring Who ' .
Oh, by the way. I am the doctor...and in the time it took you to read this... I have traveled back in time and bribed Einstein into hacking every account you ever have and ever will own...
Goodbye :)
And why on earth would you need to know such a thing??
He would HAVE to follow ALL REGULAR PROCEDURES no matter who the patient is.
A letter would be addressed to Mr. and Doctor. If they are both Doctors it would be Doctor and Doctor.
doctor's (more than one doctor)
At the doctors. Answer 2 Definatley at the doctors, it is much more private
The word doctor is a common singular noun. It requires no apostrophe.The doctor saw patients by appointment only.If the word doctor has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.I had a doctor's appointment.Note: If you happened to see many doctors at different appointments, you would write:My doctors' appointments went well.
Your doctor would use nothing it is not possible.
This depends on the type of doctorate you are referring to, such as the abbreviation for medical physicians such as a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.) or Doctor of Medicine (M.D.), research doctors such as a doctor of philosophy (PhD) or a doctor of education (EdD). Still as such the above mentioned in the plural would be as follows. Doctors of Medicine (MDs) Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine (DOs) Doctors of Philosophy (PhDs) Doctors of Education (EdDs) The above are most common within the United States.
When you are denoting ownership, as in "The doctor's thermometer was in his pocket," you use an apostrophe. The apostrophe would come after 'doctors' if you were referring to more than one doctor in denoting ownership, for example, "The doctors' patients were getting impatient."
Personally, if I were looking for a doctor, I'd use my search engine and type in "Doctors in _____" and write my town's name so Google would show me all doctors in my area ...
depends on how much the doctor charges, call your nearest dental doctors and ask. depends on how much the doctor charges, call your nearest dental doctors and ask.
The initial DDS following a doctors name indicate that the doctor has specialized in Dental Science. Another alternative would be a doctor that specialized in Dental Surgery.
The proper salutation to more than one doctor would be "Dear Doctors". A person can also list each doctor's last name after the word doctor. So if the names were Smith, Jones, and Arnold, the salutation would be "Dear Doctors, Smith, Jones, and Arnold".