"Mme." is the abbreviation for "madame". That is correct except for the period. In French, an abbreviation will have a period only when it is a truncation of the word. In the case of madame, it is the first and 2 last letters, therefore no period.
"Mme." is the abbreviation for "madame".
That is correct except for the period. In French, an abbreviation will have a period only when it is a truncation of the word. In the case of madame, it is the first and 2 last letters, therefore no period. ''Mme''
In French, an abbreviation will have a period only when it is a truncation of the word. In the case of madame, it is the first and 2 last letters, therefore no period. Therefore, the abbreviation of madame would be Mme.
No, the abbreviation for Madam is Mdm.
Madememoisslee
Madam is the full word. The abbreviation is Mme if you wanted to use it that way. You might be asking about the word 'mademoiselle', which is a French word.
That is the correct spelling of the word "ma'am" It is a contraction form used in polite address. The actual word is madam.
madame (for married or old woman)mademoiselle (for young a young woman)madame, abbreviation mme
The word 'madam' is a palindrome because it is spelled the same way backwards as forward. It is not an acronym because its individual letters do not stand for words, such as how NATO stands for North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Madame is abbreviated to Mme, the plural is Mmes.
Mrs is the abbreviation for Mistress and is usually used, in written and spoken English, to describe a married woman ie Mrs Smith is the wife of Mr Smith. It can be used when talking or writing to a married woman or about her eg "Good Morning, Mrs Smith" or "Have you heard about Mrs Jones?" or (in a written letter) "Dear Mrs Smith" Madam is the female equivalent of Sir and is used when talking to a married woman whose name you do not know. eg "Good Morning, Madam" or "Excuse me, Madam"
madam
Madam
마담 = madam
YES!!!! However, it is written ' Ma'am'. The late Queen Elizabeth (II) of the U.K. had herself addressed as 'Ma'am' in the second person. After she had been greeted as 'Your Majesty'.