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Depends on your subnet mask. If you are talking about a classful addressing scheme in a class B, then the network would be 172.32.0.0
if addressing an envelope it would be to the Reverend Canon or just Canon. His wife would be Mrs... The oral address would be Canon, and his wife Mrs.....
Set up a series of scope ranges in DHCP, or if you have a class A or class B address use a range that would give you that many addresses total. Then make sure that all the clients use DHCP for their addressing.
An example of a valid class C address would be 192.168.6.200
A professor is higher in rank than a doctor; it would be more appropriate to address them as professor if they hold the title.
It depends on the individual you are addressing. If the individual has a doctorate, you would address them as doctor. IF not, you address them as you would anyone in a formal setting (if in a formal setting).
Only if you're addressing him. Like, "Professor Smith, I have a problem." Or... "My instructor, Professor Smith, helped me with a problem." Not if it was like, "My professor helped my with a problem."
If your address is not subnetted, then the default subnet mask would be used. For this class address, it would be 255.0.0.0
To address a professor you would say 'Professor Doe' (whatever his or hers last name is.
The word English is always capitalize but not the word class. It should be English class.
When I was young, you could sent a letter to Santa by addressing it to the North Pole and it would get a reply. Try that!
Since 157.54.4.201 falls in the class B address range the default subnet mask would be: 255.255.0.0 128 - 191 is a class B address.