Thomas Anderson M.S.
Thomas Anderson B.S.
Thomas Anderson M.S.
Thomas Anderson B.S.
Thomas Anderson M.S.
Thomas Anderson B.S.
Thomas Anderson M.S.
Thomas Anderson B.S.
Thomas Anderson M.S.
Thomas Anderson B.S.
Thomas Anderson M.S.
Thomas Anderson B.S.
In the UK, typically they are written in the order in which you received the degrees. (So BS, MS).
Uplink is from MS to BS Downlink is from BS to MS P.S: BS=Base Station, MS=Mobile Station e.g cell phone
An example would have helped. If it's "Dr. O.G. Wottaschnozzle, BS, MS, MD" it means "Master of Science".
Bs ms ms
The Lahore University of Management Sciences offers the following degree programs: biology (BS, MS, PhD), chemistry (BS, MS, PhD), computer science (BS, MS, PhD), electrical engineering (BS, MS, PhD), mathematics (BS, MS, PhD), physics (BS, MS, PhD), economics (BSc, MSc), economics and politics (BSc), political science (BSc), anthropology and sociology (BSc), accounting and finance (BSc), management science (BSc, PhD), humanities (BA), history (BA), BA-LL.B, MBA, Executive MBA.
MS in Nursing
If the letters are in parentheses after a name, example John Doe (Bs), I believe they stand for "British subject".
Yeah you can. For sure as Avionics is nothing but Electrical systems in Aircrafts.
When someone has "Ms." after their name, it typically indicates that they prefer to be addressed as "Ms." in formal situations. Therefore, you would not use "Mr." or "Ms." before the name; you would simply use the name followed by "Ms." For example, you would say "Jane Doe, Ms." rather than "Ms. Jane Doe."
At least a BS, an MS, and a PhD.
Purdue University, BS, 1975; MS, 1976.
University of Georgia, BS, 1963; University of Maine, MS, 1966; University of Maine, MS, 1967.