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Cheque has miss on I'm ms can I cash it
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mgdavid said:eskbanker said:............ which is a bizarre patriarchal anachronism?"6
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I have been using Ms since my divorce when I went back to my maiden name and also because at over 60 years of age i think miss sounds silly0
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MalMonroe said:"I think Miss implies your single, Mrs married and Ms is Dint’t know (on part of writer who doesn’t know status or preferred title)wouldn’t say/none of your business"
First of all, it's YOU'RE. Secondly, Ms can refer to any woman, regardless of marital or any other status and thirdly, just . go away.Sorry if I’ve caused offence I was merely trying to point out that Ms and Miss aren’t the same.0 -
mwarby said:I was merely trying to point out that Ms and Miss aren’t the same.
My understanding of Ms has always been that it is not a third status, but for use by anyone who doesn't particularly want to use Miss or Mrs for whatever reason (eg pigeonholing as Miss or Mrs) or when someone doesn't know whether someone is a Miss or a Mrs.
I have never used it myself, but there have been plenty of times when I've been addressed that way, both when I was Miss and Mrs.
(The time it really irritates me is when I get things addressed to Mr.)2 -
I'm 99% sure the bank won't have a problem with it. Even though you prefer to use Ms, the fact the cheque has been issued to a Miss doesn't imply it's been issued to the wrong person, as these are a matter of personal choice rather than having any legal status. I doubt the bank would notice, or comment on it if they did. If you expect future cheques from the same source, you might want to educate the sender regarding titles. If you are going by Ms, they shouldn't be making an assumption either way."Real knowledge is to know the extent of one's ignorance" - Confucius0
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kinger101 said:I'm 99% sure the bank won't have a problem with it. Even though you prefer to use Ms, the fact the cheque has been issued to a Miss doesn't imply it's been issued to the wrong person, as these are a matter of personal choice rather than having any legal status. I doubt the bank would notice, or comment on it if they did. If you expect future cheques from the same source, you might want to educate the sender regarding titles. If you are going by Ms, they shouldn't be making an assumption either way.1
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MalMonroe said:"I think Miss implies your single, Mrs married and Ms is Dint’t know (on part of writer who doesn’t know status or preferred title)wouldn’t say/none of your business"
First of all, it's YOU'RE. Secondly, Ms can refer to any woman, regardless of marital or any other status and thirdly, just . go away.0 -
Maybe took offence at my rather poor typing and spelling
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off topic a lil i feel, cheque gets banked, question answered.
although maybe martin would like to use this Ms miss etc thing as part of an email poll?
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