In the US, there are two generally accepted abbreviations for 'experience,' one with a period, and one without:
No, you do not need to place an additional period after an abbreviation if the abbreviation already includes a period at the end, like "etc.". Just use one period to end the sentence.
In correct English, every abbreviation should have a period at the end
No, the abbreviation "Mrs" does not require a period.
"Mme." is the abbreviation for "madame". That is correct except for the period. In French, an abbreviation will have a period only when it is a truncation of the word. In the case of madame, it is the first and 2 last letters, therefore no period."Mme." is the abbreviation for "madame".That is correct except for the period. In French, an abbreviation will have a period only when it is a truncation of the word. In the case of madame, it is the first and 2 last letters, therefore no period. ''Mme''In French, an abbreviation will have a period only when it is a truncation of the word. In the case of madame, it is the first and 2 last letters, therefore no period. Therefore, the abbreviation of madame would be Mme.
No
No.
no
Experience.
The abbreviation for number is No. (has a period at the end). Numbers plural is Nos. (again a period at the end).
Yes, in American English, a period should be included after the abbreviation "Inc." at the end of a sentence. It signifies the end of the abbreviation and the sentence.
We put the period after the word Mr because it's an abbreviation for Mister.
No, you do not need to add an additional period at the end of a sentence that already ends with an abbreviation like Oct. The period from the abbreviation serves as the ending punctuation for the sentence.