honorific

post #4818990 post #1669985 post #2941524 post #3557643 post #2460686

An honorific is a title that expresses esteem, courtesy or respect for a position or rank when used to address or refer to a person.

Honorific titles can be used as prefixes or suffixes depending on the situation and context, and there are many factors to take into consideration when using a title.

It can depend on:

Generally, these titles are used as a third-person grammatical style and as a second-person form of address.

Many titles are positive and complimentary, showing respect for the listener, such as "Mister", "Sir", "Ma'am", "Miss", "Professor", "Doctor", and "Master". However, the opposite also exists: negative, derogatory titles are used to degrade the listener, like "Servant" or "This weirdo".

In all cases, the "honorific" tag is used when an honorific title is used to address a character in a post, whether it's complimentary or derogatory, and no matter the language of the title. (e.g. "Mademoiselle", "Señor", "Herr", "太太", "さん", "후배", "พยาบาล")

List of English honorifics

Honorific titles

Common titles

  • "Master"
  • "Mr"
  • "Miss"
  • "Mrs"
  • "Ms"
  • "Mx" (a gender-neutral/non-binary honorific)

Formal titles

  • "Sir"
  • "Gentleman"
  • "Sire"
  • "Mistress"
  • "Madam" or "Ma'am"
  • "Dame"
  • "Lord"
  • "Lady"
  • "Esq"
  • "Excellency"
  • "Your/Her/His Honour" ("Honor" in American English)

Professional titles

Related tags:

Specific languages:
Other:

See also:

Posts (view all)

post #5198325
↑5♥7C0E
post #5159928
↑64♥106C0E
post #5152348
↑61♥88C18E
post #5152151
↑23♥15C0S