Mme is the abbreviated form of "madame", i.e. Mrs.
Melle / Melles. ("mademoiselle/mesdemoiselles) is the translation of Miss/Misses
Ms. has no French equivalent - French people tend to use Mme when the marital status is irrelevant to the purpose of the letter. In spoken French we use "madame" or "mademoiselle" depending of the context: an older person will be called "madame", whereas a younger one may be called "mademoiselle"
Mme is the abbreviated form of Madame, meaning Madam or Mrs.
Madame is abbreviated to Mme, the plural is Mmes.
The French word for "Mrs." is "madame" and it is usually abbreviated as "Mme". You can write Madame or Mme. ex. Mme. Moreau or Madame Moreau (typically the wife of Monsieur Moreau).
une jeune femme
M. et Mme. (monsieur et madame)
I guess... but the correct form would be Mademoiselle, meaning an unmarried lady, like Ms. and Madame would be a married lady, like Mrs. Their abbreviations are Mlle. and Mme.
No, there is no period after "mme" in French. However, "monsieur" ("M.") needs one.
Madame is abbreviated to Mme, the plural is Mmes.
Mme
Mme
Mme is the French abbreviation for "madame." It would translate as "Mrs."
mme.
Mme. Mademoiselle is Mlle.
The French word for "Mrs." is "madame" and it is usually abbreviated as "Mme". You can write Madame or Mme. ex. Mme. Moreau or Madame Moreau (typically the wife of Monsieur Moreau).
Madame Murphy, abbreviated: mme Murphy.
Monsieur/Madame/Mademoiselle
M. et Mme. Murray sont allés à Paris.
Bonjour Mme (Madame) Loyd.