It is impolite to bestow honors upon yourself. |
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It depends on how well we know the other person and how they introduce themselves.
"Hi, I'm Mary" "Hi, I'm Miss Mary" "Hi, I'm Ms. Jones" We do all three depending on the circumstances/relationship/age/preference of the person. |
Is "Miss" an honor? |
East coaster here. Yep, Mr/Mrs Smith. Not Miss Jane. I switched since coming to DC and it feels weird, especially when I know that someone is married. How is it not insulting to call a married woman Miss? |
| This is why being Indian is awesome - we called all of our parents friends "auntie" and "uncle" (whether they were Indian or not) and I called my friends' parents Mrs. and Mr. X unless they told me to call them something else (and most did not, we grew up in the midwest). I don't know what we'll do with our kids (my husband is not Indian, and the majority of our friends are not). |
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I could care less what a child calls me because I assume no matter what they say "Miss X, Miss. First Name, First Name" it is said with respect.
For my own kids, I have them call adults what the adult wants to be called. This usually seems to be a mix of Miss First Name and First Name. I still call my best friend's parents Mr. and Mrs Last Name. Growing up, there was a mix of Mr. and Mrs. Last Name and First Name. |
This is so silly to me. Kids call me Ms. Firstname because others have instructed them to, but I wouldn't mind just Firstname. The lack of use of an honorific isn't going to make a kid think they're my peer or make them be disrespectful. |
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I prefer Ms/Mr Last Name but have quickly realized that in this day and age I don't know the last names of many of the adults we come in contact with, so we've defaulted to Ms/Mr First Name.
DCUM has seen this thread before and lots of folks believe it's demeaning to say that children are somehow lesser beings and need to honor or suck up to adults. IMO, so be it. Adults hold a different place in our society, yes, generally deserving of more respect as a baseline. I do not care for it when my neighbor's 5yr old calls out "Hey Jennifer" to me the same way he would to another 5yr old. |
Same here. |
Does that mean at elementary school, where teachers are called Mr./Mrs. Last name, that the teacher is being requesting an honor be bestowed upon them? How many students in ES refer to their teacher as "Jane"? |
To make your example the same as the PP's example, Jane would need to instruct the students (and their parents) to refer to her as "Miss Last Name after they'd already been calling her Jane. Personally, I think the PP sounds pretty uptight. Using your first name is not the be all and end all sign that these 7 year olds don't respect you and correcting them seems more like a way of putting them in their place. My child has often called her father by his first name, because that's what she hears me calling him. She refers to my friends by their first names for the same reason. She is 2.5 and met most of these people well before she had any idea of what "good manners" are. |
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Mr./Ms. Surname unless invited to use a first name. We are comfortable with being addressed by our first names by children, and I always say "just [my name] is fine," when friends try to get their kids to call me Ms. FirstName. Thankfully, DC goes to a preschool where most teachers prefer surnames so I don't have to deal with it there, either.
I should add that we are a family where adult friends are called Auntie/Uncle and we're fine with that if friends insist on an additional moniker. |
| I prefer to add the title Ms./Mrs./Mr in front of the first or last name. I cringe when I hear my 5 year old son's friends call me by my first name. It sounds disrespectful to my ears. I don't make a big deal about it or correct them but I don't like it. |
| We are strongly a Ms/Mr and then what they want (I just ask them). I don't feel comfortable with children calling adults by just their first name. It seems disrespectful. |
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Am I the only one who finds it incredibly uptight that people are wanting/asking to be called Miss ___? That seems so stilted and archaic to me! Please, call me by my name!
That said, if a kid calls me Miss ___ I don't care. I just find it oddly formal/unnatural. That's not my name. |