Mrs is used to address a widow.
You call a widow Mrs., unless they change their last name and wish to be called Ms. If not, always go with Mrs.
Miss, Ms , or a title like Dr may be used for any unmarried woman, Unless she is a widow and still wishes to be called Mrs. Whatshername.
Yes, of course.Some widows will wish to continue to be addressed as Mrs. John Smith, some as Mrs. Jane Smith ,or some as Ms. Jane Smith. It is up to the widow to indicate how she wishes to be addressed .
Miss Watson is the sister of Widow Douglas.
No, a widow generally remains as "Mrs".
Ms. is a product of the feminist era, in response to the fact that is Miss or Mrs. indicates their marriage status. Technically, Miss or Mrs. are related to other languages such as the Spanish Senora or Senorita. Orignally, this indicated whether or not the woman is a virgin, not just married/unmarried as we use it today. Ms. allows a woman to remain silent on the issue of her marital status, and gives them equal standing to the Mr. of their male counterparts. A widow traditionally remains "Mrs. Smith" or (old school) "Mrs. James Smith", even after her husband passes. Optionally she could begin using Ms. just as she could have when her husband was alive.
Mrs., the abbreviation for Mistress, is a title for a married woman or a widow. Ms. is a title used for a woman whose marital status is unknown or irrelevant (as in business). The letters Ms. are not an abbreviation of a word, they are an amalgamation drawn from the letters of Miss and Mrs.
Miss has no punctuation, Mrs. has a period at the end
there is no age limit before you get married you are called a Miss when you get married you will be called Mrs:)some people say 25
It is always Mrs. unless she asks you to use Ms.
It is always Mrs. unless she asks you to use Ms.