"Bye, Miss!" and "Hi, young lady!" are English equivalents of the French phrase Salut, Mlle! Context makes clear which form suits regarding la mademoiselle ("the young lady"). The pronunciation will be "sa-lyoo mad-mwa-zel" in French.
The equivalent of Miss in French is Mademoiselle. The abbreviation therefore is Mlle.
"La mlle" is an abbreviation for the French word "mademoiselle," which translates to "Miss" in English. It is used as a title for an unmarried woman or a young woman.
Spanish is Spanish where ever in the Spanish-speaking world. Regionalisms exists in all languages. No such word....seems to be missing a vowel. Mlle is the French abbreviation for Madamoiselle, which corresponds to Ms. in English. It may be possible that you are looking at a French document.
No such word in french. Note. Mlle is an abbreviation for Mademoiselle, meaning 'miss'.
Mademoiselle means 'Miss'. Shortened to mamselle in speech and Mlle in writing.
Mlle.
Mlle - mademoiselle
Mme. Mademoiselle is Mlle.
Miss is "mademoiselle" in French; this is abbreviated "mlle".
"Mlle" is correct. No further punctuation is necessary.
If you mean the abbreviation for Mademoiselle when you are addressing a letter it would be: Mlle.
Mlle For example, a woman called Jeanne Boudier may be addressed as Mlle Boudier. Mlle is short for Mademoiselle and is only for unmarried women.