Anesthesiologist or Anesthetist.
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.
Yes and no. The person you buy it from does not have to register the vehicle but they must title it before they sell it to you.
No, before ... as in: Marcus Welby, MD
You will probably have to go to court and get the judge to order it.
Journeyman is usually the title given to a person who has attained middle-level competence in a profession.
You shouldn't have a problem with getting a title. Just put your information in as the buyer and sign the title. The person you bought it from never titled it and decided to sell it before he did. If its dated, you may have to pay a fine for not registering it in the 45 days given (or whatever time your state allows). Now, if the person you bought it from filled their information in, then he would have to title it before he can sell it to you.
In the title of Raymond Chandler's 1939 novel, 'The Big Sleep' is a (hard-boiled) euphemism for death. If someone is sleeping the big sleep then they are dead.
Sleep Medicine Physician
You capitalize a title of a position when it directly precedes a person's name, but not when it stands alone or follows the name. For example, in "Professor Smith," "Professor" is capitalized because it comes before the name. But in "The professor spoke," it is lowercase because it is not directly before the name.
because he had to have surgery
a persons title
The term "registered nurse in surgery" is not typically capitalized unless it is part of a specific title or heading. In general usage, you would write it in lowercase, as in "the registered nurse in surgery provided excellent care." However, if it appears in a formal title, such as "Registered Nurse in Surgery Smith," it should be capitalized.