Your Honor
A judge is part of the judicial branch of government. In the United States a judge is addressed as your honor while in Canada the judge is addressed as your worship.
The title used for addressing a judge is "Your Honor" in court proceedings.
In a letter a judge is addressed as "The Honorable (followed by name)" In court a judge is address as "Your Honor" or as "Judge."
Actually, it is acceptable to use "Judge (Name of Judge):" The rule is that you always capitalize a person's title.
A judge should be addressed as "Your Honor" or "The Honorable Judge __"
Judges should be addressed, "your honor".
A judge is addressed as "Your Honor".
"Your Honor" is an appropriate salutation to use in a letter addressed to a judge when you do not know their name.
A judge should be addressed as "Your Honor" in all correspondence. Whether addressing him or her verbally or in a letter, this will be a correct way to do so.
Magistrate is a judge. He or she is addressed as judge.
When you are speaking, the judge is usually addressed as "Your Honor" (As in, "Your Honor, my name is _____ and I'm the defendant and representing myself"). Less common is the Title, "Judge" followed by the last name (This assumes you can correctly pronounce it), such as "Judge Hardy, may I ask the Court (never YOU) a question?" If you are writing, the judge is usually referred to as "The Honorable ___(First, Middle Initial, Last Name) _____".
No, unfortunately youre stuck with the judge you have.