Mag. usually refers to "Magister" which refers to a graduate degree from some countries in Europe. The degree is a usually a research oriented degree similar to Masters or Masters of Science degree.
Mag. Dr. is an academic qualification in Germany. Mag. is an abbreviation of Magister (Master). The most common qualification is Magister Artium, MA(Master of Arts, MA).
In Germany, anyone who obtains the two highest grades of "very good" or "good" may then go on to gain promotion to Magister Doktor (Mag. Dr.) by completing independent scientific research, a dissertation and an oral examination.
Dr. iur. (Doctur iuris) or Dr. jur.(Doctor juris) means Doctor of Law.
It is German name......
It means possibly "doctor".
German- American
Dr. Seuss comes from Theodore Suess Guisel, who is, in reality, Dr. Seuss. He got caught drinking in college, which was a crime, or something, so to stay under the radar of administration and to continue working on whatever he was doing, he took his middle name, Seuss. He had dreams of becoming something, and went to England to get a doctorate (not sure of the subject...). He got married before he finished his education, and came back to America. As a memory of his failed dreams, he called himself Dr. And so Dr. Seuss came to be his pen name.
Named for German psychologist Dr. Mesmer.
No he is German. He also live's in Germany
When his parents get the check from their appearance on Dr. Phil or when his sister hits pay dirt with Hustler mag.
Dr Mengele specialised in experiments on twins.
Expressionism.
You mean above-average I guess. I'll give the correct expression in German first (not Swiss German!): "... besser als der Durchschnitt..." Now the one in Swiss German (the main difference in spelling are dropped letters): "... bessr als dr Durchschnitt..." - "... better than the average... " There are official rules for spelling in Swiss German... but nowadays Swiss German is what they speak and German is what they write. Swiss German is still in use for messages to friends, etc. but not official documents.
Dr. Seuss, whose real name was Theodor Geisel, was fluent in English and also had some knowledge of German. He incorporated elements of both languages into his whimsical and imaginative writing style.