No. It's short for "madam."
The prefix "Mme" is short for "Madame," a French honorific used to address a married or older woman. It is equivalent to "Mrs." in English.
The short story "Madame Butterfly" was created in 1898 by American author John Luther Long. It was later adapted into the famous opera by Giacomo Puccini in 1904.
The short form of the title madam is ma'am.
Maryland
she rather has short but long hair so id say in the middle
No ma'am double "A" with the apostophe between the "A" s. Ma'am is short for madame, the apostrophe takes the place of the d. Just like don't is short for do not. Europeans and the French use madame, American's and Canadian's use ma'am.
The rising action in the story 'The Necklace' is when Madame Loisel learns about the ball, gets a gown, and finally asks to borrow the necklace from Madame Forestier.
The Greek root word of "ma'am" is "madam," which comes from the French "madame" and ultimately originates from the Latin "mea domina," meaning "my lady."
Madame Loisel borrows a diamond necklace from her friend Madame Forestier to wear to the party. She considers it her most valuable possession and believes it will make her stand out and elevate her social status at the event.
MD is doctor, mag is short for magazine, and the use of those abbreviations tells you the answer is an abbreviation also. The answer is JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association).
Madame c.j. Walker was short and plump and around 5-5 or 5-6