In American English, "Dr." is typically used with a period, as it is an abbreviation for "Doctor." However, in British English, "Dr" is often written without a period. The choice may also depend on the style guide being followed, so it's best to check the specific guidelines if you're writing formally.
Yes you should always do that
The end of a sentence always needs a period.
Yes, you should include a period after the abbreviation "Dr." when it is used at the end of a sentence, in order to indicate that the sentence has ended. "Dr." is an abbreviation for "Doctor," so it functions like any other abbreviation in terms of punctuation rules.
The correct title is "Dr." with a period after it.
The correct way to write "Dr" is with a period as "Dr." to indicate it is an abbreviation for "Doctor." Similarly, "Mrs" is also typically written with a period as "Mrs." to denote "Mistress." However, in some modern styles, especially in less formal contexts, the periods may be omitted, resulting in "Dr" and "Mrs." Always consider the specific style guide you are following, as preferences can vary.
Because one period is signifying the shortened word (ie Dr.) and the other is just a period for the end of the sentence.
Doctor. The title (abbreviation) has a period "Dr." as in "Dr. Smith's office".
Yes, you would typically use a period after "Dr." when it precedes a title such as Theologian. So it would be "Dr. [Name], Theologian."
talk to your dr. maybe you need to be put on a birth control pill that has higher estrogen.
A period would go inside parentheses to finish a complete sentence, but you always need sentence-ending punctuation outside of the parentheses.
Yes you should always use a period.
probably means you have a yeast infection women get them usually from antibotics. but its always best to see your dr, otherwise try OTC monistat.hope this helps you