Juniors forever remain juniors. Unless you have it changed legally.
A second lender (junior lienor) must be paid off if the property is being sold.A second lender (junior lienor) must be paid off if the property is being sold.A second lender (junior lienor) must be paid off if the property is being sold.A second lender (junior lienor) must be paid off if the property is being sold.
If you are using the term, Junior, there is no value in your son doing so too. He should be the Third. If your father is no longer living, you can stop being Junior, and become Senior. Then your son can be called Junior. But that is a matter of choice; no one sets any requirements on this. Remember, the basic purpose of both Senior/Junior and First/Second/Third, is to let two people with the same name be readily differentiated when they are being talked or written about.
Yes, "Junior" is being utilized as a proper noun in this instance.
The correct way to write "Junior" after someone's surname is to capitalize both the surname and "Junior" itself, with a comma placed before "Junior." For example, if the individual's surname is Smith, it would be written as "Smith, Junior."
It will start to be abolished from 2014.
Yes. They already performed there last January. Their next stop is in Chengdu. ^_^
Must be a junior high school answer
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XHIBIT - Paparazzi
rohini sec 11