Ex: Col. & Mrs. Franklin Ashford
note: if they live on a base with no home delivery , use the APO ,FPO, PSC or other box address as proper for the Colonel's branch and place of service .
The correct form of invitation in "you are invited to lunch" or "you are invited at lunch" is "you are invited to lunch". You could also say, "you are invited to lunch at my house" as this would be grammatically correct.
You failed to state where you are located. In the US it would be "Governor," or "Governor and Mrs."
I believe the correct address is 'Your Worship'.
The correct spelling is "address". When you are talking about more than one it's "addresses".
From a lower rand soldier "Sir".
That is the correct spelling for "highness" (elevation, or a form of royal address).
The formal, correct way to address a cardinal is "Your Eminence".
For Russian Grand Dukes and Grand Duchesses (HIH) the correct form of address is: His / Her / Your Imperial Highnesses For Russian Prince and Princesses (HH) of the Imperial Family the correct form of address is: His / Her / Your Highnesses
Invite
Invite
Invitations are usually written with the husband's name first. For example: "Mr. and Mrs. John Smith", "John and Mary Smith" or "Mr. John Smith and Mrs. Mary Smith". The latter is the correct form of address if the couple has divorced.
Forms of the verb to invite are inviting (gerund) and invitation (noun).A different word is the adjective invitiate, meaning not spoiled or corrupted.