You don't use the words Mrs. Mr. or ms. or anything like that
instead at the end you add -san
like:
Fuji-san [which is actually what they call Mt. Fuji]
or Tomimoto-san.
and you don't say it like 'sand'
its more of 'saw' with an 'nn' at the end.
-EDIT-
'Chan' would be for females.
pronunciation: Ch (as in "CHange your clothes") ah (as in "Let's go to the spA") nn (as in "This weighs a toN")
Example:
if a woman's name is something like Toboso Yomi;
(And last names are ordered FIRST.)
Then you would say
"Toboso-Chan"
if it is male you are speaking to,
"Toboso-San".~
Hope it helped, even if just a little. ^^
~san is Mr., Mrs., and Ms. Suzuki-san = Mr. Suzuki
I don't think it really matters. But in society today you normally say Mr. then Mrs. I would do that to be safe.
"Mr" = "Herr". "Mrs" = "Fru".
Yes. It would be appropriate to say "Mr. and Mrs. Smith" for example.
-san Mr/Ms/Miss/Mrs -kun Mr -sama Honorable
-san Mr/Ms/Miss/Mrs -kun Mr -sama Honorable
Mr/Mrs/Miss/Ms.
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.
To say mr <name> in Japanese, you add -san to the name. Like this: Mr. Kobayashi = Kobayashi san
They are two people - two is plural, so it should be "Where are Mr and Mrs Jones?"
If you were to talk mr. And mrs. Libre what would you say so
Pani is Mrs., Pan is Mr.