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Suffix (name)
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A
name suffix, in the Western naming tradition, follows a persons full
name and provides additional information about the person.
Post-nominal letters indicate that the individual holds a position, educational degree, accreditation, office or honour. The most common social name suffixes are
senior and
junior.
Contents
[hide]
[edit] Academic
Academic suffixes indicate the degree earned at a
college or
university. These include the
bachelor's degree (A.B, B.A., B.Sc., etc.) the
master's degree (M.A., M.B.A., M.Sc., etc.), the
doctoral degree (Ph.D., D.Phil., Eng.D., etc.) and the professional doctorates (D.D., M.D., J.D., etc.).
In the case of doctorates, either the prefix (e.g. "Dr.") or the suffix (e.g. "M.D." or "Ph.D.") is used, not both. In the United States, the suffix is the preferred format (thus allowing differentiation between various types of doctorate) in written documentation.
[edit] Honorary
Such titles may be given by:
[edit] Professional
Professional titles include
Esq., used for an
attorney (usually a practicing attorney) in the
USA who has passed a state bar examination, and CSA (casting) and ASCAP, which indicate membership in professional societies. The suffix CPA is also used for individuals who have completed the requirements to become a Certified Public Accountant. Similarly,
Chartered Financial Analysts use the suffix CFA. Engineers that are certified as a
Professional Engineer in his or her state will use the suffix P.E. and
Chartered Engineers use CEng. Likewise,
Registered Architects will sometimes use the suffix R.A., or more often a suffix such as AIA or RIBA that refers to their professional society. Officers and enlisted in the
United States Military will add an abbreviation of the service frequently to disambiguate seniority, and reserve status. For example, Captain Smith, USN, outranks Captain Jones, USMC.
Members of
religious orders will commonly use their order's initials as a suffix to their personal name. For example, a
Franciscan friar uses the post-nominal initials
OFM, derived from the order's name in
Latin,
Ordo Fratrum Minorum; a
Viatorian priest uses the suffix
CSV, from the
English name of the order, the
Clerics of Saint Viator.
[edit] Social
The most common name suffixes are senior and junior, limited chiefly to American usage, which may be written with a capital first letter (Sr.) or in lower case (jr.) following the persons name (with or without an interceding comma). The term junior is only correctly used if a child is given exactly the same name as his or her parent. (See, for example, Emily Post's Etiquette by Elizabeth L. Post 1985.) When the suffixes are spelled out in full, they are always written with the first letter in lower case. Social name suffixes are far more frequently applied to men than to women. In
French, the designations for a father and son with the same name are
père (father) and
fils (son).
Sons with a different middle name or initial may also be called
Junior. An example is
Ronald P. Reagan, the son of the late
U.S. president, who is still titled junior even though his middle name, Prescott, differs from his late fathers middle name, which was Wilson. This notwithstanding, a son may sometimes be nicknamed "Junior" even if he is not titled as such, because "Junior" is a popular familial nickname in the United States. An example of this is
WWE chairman
Vincent Kennedy McMahon who is sometimes credited as Vince McMahon, Jr. because his own father (
Vincent J. McMahon) was credited as Vince McMahon, Sr. Another instance of this is
George W. Bush, who is nicknamed Junior by his family. Interestingly, the son of
actor Lon Chaney, was billed by Hollywood as
Lon Chaney, Jr., to capitalize on his fathers success, even though he had an entirely different birth name: Creighton Tull Chaney. A similar situation exists with singer
Hank Williams. His son, Randall Hank Williams, is professionally known as
Hank Williams, Jr. Randall's son Shelton Hank Williams is known professionally as
Hank Williams III.
Although there are instances of daughters who are named after their mothers and thus use the suffix "jr." (such as
Winifred Sackville Stoner, Jr.,
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, Jr., and Carolina Herrera, Jr.) or after their grandmothers with the suffix "II", this is not common. Usually, the namesake is given a different middle name and so would not need a suffix for differentiation. The title "Jr." is sometimes used in legal documents, particularly those pertaining to wills and estates, to distinguish among female family members of the same name.
A wife who uses the title
Mrs. would also use her husband's full name, including the suffix. In less formal situations, the suffix may be omitted. Hence: Mrs. Lon Chaney Jr. on a wedding invitation, but Mrs. L. Chaney or simply Shannon Chaney for a friendly note. Widows are entitled to retain their late husband's full names and suffixes but divorcees may not continue to style themselves with a former husband's full name and suffix, even if they retain the surname.
There is no hard-and-fast rule over what happens to suffixes when the most senior of the name dies. Do the men retain their titles, or do they all "move up" one? Neither
tradition nor
etiquette provides a definitive answer (columnist
Judith Martin, for example, believes they should all move up, but most agree that this is up to the individual families). Upon the death of John Smith Sr., his son, John Smith, Jr. may decide to style himself John Smith Sr. (causing confusion if his
widowed mother and his wife both use the formal style Mrs. John Smith, Sr., and necessitating that his son and grandson change their titles as well) or he may remain John Smith, Jr. for the rest of his lifetime. One effect of moving up one is that it eliminates the extension of Roman numerals over the generations: i.e., a John Smith III, IV, and V. A disadvantage is that it may cause confusion with respect to birth certificates, credit cards, and the like. In practice it is quite uncommon for families to go beyond "III" in naming children, although there are notable exceptions; The legal name of
Tom Cruise, for instance, is actually Thomas Cruise Mapother IV, and the oldest sons of U.S. Senator
Jay Rockefeller (legal name John Davison Rockefeller IV) and former
Major League Baseball pitcher Orel Hershiser both have "V" as their suffix.
The style
Esq. or
Esquire was once used to distinguish a
gentleman from the rank and file. It is still occasionally used as a courtesy title in formal correspondence in the United Kingdom. It is not used in a social sense in the United States, where
Esq. or
esq. is used as the professional styling for an attorney. If
Esq. is used, the
honorific should be omitted.
[edit] Ordering of post-nominal letters
In some countries the arrangement of
post-nominal letters is