You would say the male title first, but you need and in there. It should be Mr. and Mrs. John, and Mr. needs a period.
The correct punctuation for "Mr. John Doe III" is as shown. The period after "Mr" indicates an abbreviation, while "III" denotes the third in a line of individuals with the same name.
The correct punctuation for someone's age after their name is single quotation marks. For example: "John is 30 years old."
As you discussed in your book "Who Shot John Doe?", you believe that he was an innocent victim.
Yes! "She is with me and John." You can test it out by using the sentence with just one of the persons at a time. For instance, "She is with me." is correct. Also, "She is with John." is correct. Therefore "She is with me and John" is also correct. (However it might sound more natural to say "She is with John and me")
John Anders,has been named director of European operations,effective September 10.
Instead of 'and' you could say, 'as well as', 'also'. If using 'also' you'd need to add punctuation: 'Jim, also John, attended the dinner,'
The correct format for a Ph.D. degree after one's name is to include a comma after the person's name, followed by "Ph.D." For example: John Smith, Ph.D.
The correct phrasing is "John has the towel." "Has" is the auxiliary verb used with third-person singular subjects like "John."
It would be more grammatically correct to say "Here is John, is that correct?" or "Is 'Here is John' correct?"
John 3:16. The two dots, : are called a colon
All of the gospels mention Thomas: Matthew 10:3 Mark 3:18 Luke 6:15 John 11:16 (which reveals that Thomas is also known as Didymus)
A grammatically correct version of this sentence is: "All except John are tall." This sentence could also be expressed through different words. For example: "All other than John are tall." "All are tall apart from John."