"We got it in last time we met"
"I loved the way your body looked before"
Yes, "PhD" is a title that can be used before a person's name to indicate that they have earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree.
Hester Prynne meets her husband, Roger Chillingworth, in England before she immigrates to America. They are separated for a time, and she has an affair that results in her daughter Pearl, before they are reunited in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, where the events of "The Scarlet Letter" take place.
The flashback reveals that Hester was married to a scholar or doctor before she came to the New World. Another thing the flashback shows about Hester's past is that her husband sent her ahead of him to the New world but then never showed up.
Hester meets up with Chillingworth in the prison where she is being held for her public shaming. Chillingworth arrives in the colony and poses as a doctor in order to gain access to Hester and extract information about her relationship with Dimmesdale.
You go ask the doctor.
Th MD would indicate she is a medical doctor.
honorary titles or prefixes that can be used before a person's name to indicate their marital status (Mr or Mrs) or professional status (Rev for Reverend, Dr for Doctor).
Chillingworth is pretty much a leech attached to Dimmesdale. Chillingworth is living and thriving off the pain/guilt he is inflicting on Dimmesdale to the point where he can no longer live after Dimmesdale's death.
If you mean do you have to be a nurse before you can be a doctor, the answer is no.
He is Hester's husband, who is disguising himself as a physician so he could meet with Hester.Master Brackett is actually the Jailer at the prison that Hester is at. Hester's husband, who disguised himself as a Doctor, is Rodger Chillingworth (which is a fake name he adopted when he entered to town).
Danger Responsiveness Send for help Airways Breathing Circulation Severe bleeding
Roger Chillingworth, Hester's vengeful husband masquerading as a doctor, discovers their plan to elope and deliberately sabotages it. Chillingworth's relentless pursuit of revenge and desire for retribution sets off a chain of events that ultimately lead to the tragic conclusion of the novel.