John Smith, Sr. and Mary
The husband's name is listed first.
When addressing an envelope to a married couple where the wife has a PhD, you should put her title first. The correct format would be: "Dr. [Wife's First Name] [Wife's Last Name] and Mr. [Husband's First Name] [Husband's Last Name]." If you want to include their full names, it would look like: "Dr. [Wife's Full Name] and Mr. [Husband's Full Name]." This shows respect for her academic achievement while still acknowledging the husband's title.
The husband's name goes first: Mr. & Mrs. John Doe.
A husband's stepfather is a step-father-in-law to your wife, but, if your wife is comfortable she can still call him dad and if not, she can call him by his first name.
the husbands
It is etiquette to put the wife's name first and inside the card put her name first and then the husbands (the deceased was his mother-in-law) so he should be included.
doesn't matter
The proper salutation in this case would be "Dr. [Wife's Last Name] and Mr. [Husband's Last Name]." This format acknowledges the wife's professional title while also including the husband's name. If they share the same last name, you would write "Dr. [Last Name] and Mr. [Husband's First Name] [Last Name]."
First, the husband's name is Jim Bob not Billy Bob, and his wife's name is Michelle.
There is no formality when a wife writes a letter as to whether her husband or her own name comes first. Generally it is the man and woman if the letter is being sent to another man and if the letter is written more to the wife of the person you are sending it too then you can put your own name first. It is strictly your choice.
No. by convention in English the Wife's name is separated from the husband's name by the term, and.
the understanding of husband and wife is first given in Genesis 2:24