Juniors forever remain juniors. Unless you have it changed legally.
The term "junior" typically stops being used when the individual it was referring to passes away.
"Junior" is a suffix, commonly used to denote a person who has the same name as their parent or grandparent.
"Jr." is the suffix for "Junior" and is used after a man's name when he shares the same name as his father. "Sr." is the suffix for "Senior" and is used after a man's name when he has the same name as his son, who is usually named after him.
Yes, "Junior" in "junior year of high school" should be capitalized when it is used as part of a proper noun or as a title. For example: "She is a Junior in junior year."
Yes, "Jr" is a suffix typically used when a child is given the same name as their parent. It signifies that they are the "junior" with the same name as the parent.
"JR" as a suffix to a name typically indicates that the person is a "junior," meaning they have the same name as their father. The suffix is used to distinguish between the two individuals in writing or conversation.
yes
I have heard Sóisear used for "Junior" in the sense I think you intended.Pronounced só-shar.
A title should be capitalized only if it is used like a name: I spoke to Junior Counselor Higgins. Junior Counselor Higgins was invited to the meeting. If a title is not used as a name, it is not capitalized: I spoke to the junior counselor. We hired ten junior counselors.
Junior is used to distinguish a father from son when their names are completely identical.
No, "JR" is the correct abbreviation for junior, typically used to denote a son with the same name as his father.
it stopped being used in 2004
Yes, it can be (the junior senator, junior grade).The word junior can act as a noun or nickname for a junior indivividual, and be used after a name to indicate a son with the same name as his father (often abbreviated, as in Bob Jr.).
Stop being such a tool.
"Jr." is the suffix for "Junior" and is used after a man's name when he shares the same name as his father. "Sr." is the suffix for "Senior" and is used after a man's name when he has the same name as his son, who is usually named after him.
It depends on how it is being used, but in most times no, it will not be capitalized. If you're using the word to distinguish between a father and son of the same name, then you capitalise it, For example: John Smith Senior John Smith Junior
Jr is the abbreviated adjective junior, capitalized because it is used as part of someone's name.
1865