T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
903.1 | | DEMING::FOSTER | | Mon Dec 18 1989 11:05 | 8 |
|
Normally, if you're into protocol, Mr. & Mrs. is the way to go. But
when its a close relative, they may feel honored if you do something
unusual, so go ahead.
Spoken by someone who sends letters home addressed to Mommy! and Daddy!
or Dr. XXX M.D. (its supposed to be one or the other, but my redundancy
speaks of volumes of pride!)
|
903.2 | | CUPCSG::BELLIVEAU | | Mon Dec 18 1989 11:12 | 8 |
| How about **Ms.** and Mr.? Or how about first names?
One of the difficulties I ran into was hyphenated names. Both my
sisters hyphenate their names, and when I sent a card to Carole and
John M-G my brother-in-law's nose got a little out of joint. I told
him my hand was too tired to write out both names.
Linda
|
903.3 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the mirror speaks, the reflection lies | Mon Dec 18 1989 12:05 | 17 |
|
Or how about
The X Family
or
The Xs.
I'm not much into the Mr/Mrs/Ms stuff......Sounds so formal!
;-)
kath
|
903.4 | WHO CARES | SHARE::PHELAN | | Mon Dec 18 1989 12:06 | 9 |
| I honestly don't think it matters. I've recieved Mr. and Mrs. P as
well as my first name and my husbands name written out in full.
Sometimes my name is first sometimes it's 2nd. when Mr. and Mrs. P..
is used, the Mr. is always first. and it is that way just to keep
things consistant... I should think your brother-in-law should think
about things before his nose falls completly off his head! I would
think there are MORE important things to worry about!
|
903.5 | | MANIC::THIBAULT | While I breathe, I hope | Mon Dec 18 1989 13:47 | 9 |
| I agree with Kath back in .3. I always just put "The X's" if there's more
than one person. In our case, since my husband and I have different last
names, mail from my family is addressed to Thibault/Newsham and mail from
his family is addressed Newsham/Thibault (with the exception of one of his
bro's who insists on Mrs. Newsham...I guess it's a southern thing ;-) ).
I absolutely hate being called Mrs. anything...spit spit spit...after all,
that's what we used to call *old* people when we were younger kids :-)
Jenna
|
903.6 | | LEAF::S_DOWMAN | Just another day in paradise | Mon Dec 18 1989 13:49 | 1 |
| A Trivial Pursuit in The Game of Life.
|
903.7 | Relatives/friends first, spouse second | SEARS::D_CARROLL | Who am I to disagree? | Mon Dec 18 1989 15:22 | 19 |
| How strange...I just realized that I don't think I have *ever* addressed
a letter to Mr. & Mrs. X (or Mrs.& Mr. X). I only write three kinds of letters,
personal, in which I simply use the person's name, business, in which case
it is only to one person and I use the appropriate title or none at all,
and Xmas cards, in which case, if it is a family (of > 2) I address it to
The X's, or "the X gang", and it it is a couple, I address to Person1 and
Person2 Smith, where person1 is the person I am closer with and person2 is
their spouse.
In general, I would say put the person's name you are closer with first.
In your case, your sister's name.
Then, as people say, it really doesn't matter.
(And personally, if someone volunteered to address *my* Xmas cards, I would
be glad to let them address them just about any way they pleased...I *hate*
addressing xmas cards.)
D!
|
903.8 | | LOWLIF::HUXTABLE | Who enters the dance must dance. | Mon Dec 18 1989 16:37 | 21 |
| I generally don't use titles for other people (unless
specifically requested to) and *strongly* prefer that they
not use a title for me. The exceptions are my uncle who is a
minister and my uncle who is in the military.
The vast majority of people to whom I send holiday cards are
either single or couples with no children. When the last
names are different, I write 'em both...and like D! I
generally put the name first of the person I knew first.
(That's not conscious, it's just that when I change from
talking about "Chris" only to talking about "Chris and Jerry"
as a couple I generally do it in that order...so I habitually
write Chris's name first.) And when there's kids living at
home, (which happens rarely for me), I write the kids' first
names on a second line.
I don't mind addressing the cards...what I mind is the
feeling of guilt about not including a hand-written note in
each one! ;)
-- Linda
|
903.9 | no problem | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Mon Dec 18 1989 18:07 | 7 |
| < I don't mind addressing the cards...what I mind is the
< feeling of guilt about not including a hand-written note in
< each one! ;)
I solved this a few years ago when I decided not to send cards at
all. The whole thing just seemed pointless. I usually call the
people I care about anyway. liesl
|
903.10 | back in the spirit | WMOIS::M_KOWALEWICZ | Definitely! 246 | Tue Dec 19 1989 08:36 | 1 |
|
|
903.11 | I'll get it eventually | WMOIS::M_KOWALEWICZ | Definitely! 246 | Tue Dec 19 1989 08:38 | 5 |
|
Thanx. Especially D! , when y'look at it that way 8-) 8-) 8-) 8-) 8-)
happy holidays all, I'm takin' the rest of the
year off to go shopping. Kbear
|
903.12 | Xmas memories | ULTRA::ZURKO | We're more paranoid than you are. | Thu Dec 21 1989 14:32 | 5 |
| I remember when I was a kid I _loved_ seeing my name on Xmas cards. The
'family' stuff didn't cut it (I figured they had no idea what my name was, and
were wimping out. A budding cynic.). The worst was Mr and Mrs blah-blah-blah
and family. I was an only child, not a family!
Mez
|
903.13 | feeling silly | ASHBY::MINER | Barbara Miner HLO2-3 | Thu Dec 21 1989 20:24 | 12 |
|
For myself, I prefer Dr. and Mr. :-) :-) :-) :-)
Hasn't happened yet, though we occasionally get Dr. and Mrs.
Barbi
I doubt that I'll ever get used to Mrs.
|
903.14 | forget what last name(s?) the child has | GLINKA::GREENE | Catmax = Catmax + 1 | Thu Dec 21 1989 22:06 | 10 |
| .13 reminds me of some friends in graduate school. My male friend
met his wife after she had her Ph.D. while he was still working
toward his. So technically it was Dr. Female Smith and
Mr. Male Jones. HER family continually got their noses out of
joint by the return address they insisted on using:
Dr. and Mr. Smith rather than the "approved" Mr. and Mrs. Jones
Now it is Dr. Smith and Dr. Jones. Would've saved ink if they
had become the Drs. Smith-Jones or some such.
|
903.15 | | CSC32::DUBOIS | Love makes a family | Fri Dec 22 1989 18:58 | 11 |
| To us it *is* a big deal. We usually do not use titles, and this
year our most often form of address was:
female_name and male_name last_name
The infrequent exceptions were elderly widowed relatives for whom I
insist we honor their wishes and address them as:
Mrs. his_name
Carol
|
903.16 | But when I get my PhD.... | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Wed Dec 27 1989 12:13 | 15 |
|
Mark became Mr. Peggy Leedberg for my group's holiday party,
he was not impressed, I kinda liked it.
I try to never use titles in addressing except for Catholic
religious Sisters, Brothers and Fathers (what no mothers???).
_peggy
(-)
|
Peer to peer, first name, last name.
|
903.17 | Yes, "mothers." too | CUPCSG::SMITH | Passionate commitment to reasoned faith | Wed Dec 27 1989 12:28 | 4 |
| re: .16
I've heard of religious "mothers" as in Mother Superior, Mother
Angelica (on TV), etc.
|
903.18 | not to forget... | SQLRUS::FISHER | Pat Pending | Wed Dec 27 1989 12:59 | 1 |
| And Mother Theresa, for sure.
|
903.19 | | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Wed Dec 27 1989 13:27 | 8 |
|
> And Mother Theresa, for sure.
Thanks, I thought I was missing something.
_peggy
|
903.20 | occupant doesn't make it... | MKODEV::OSBORNE | Blade Walker | Wed Dec 27 1989 17:29 | 3 |
|
I'm not picky. I'll accept any expression of good will not addressed
to "occupant".
|
903.21 | Alphabetical order | KERNEL::MCGOWAN | | Thu Dec 28 1989 06:09 | 8 |
| Surely Mr & Mrs (in that order) is stricly impartial, as the titles
are listed in alphabetical order.
The same problem applies in movie cast lists - often listed in
alphabetical order so as not to offend "more" or "less" important
actors.
Pete
|
903.22 | maybe I'll have a word with him about it | COGITO::SULLIVAN | Dance the dance that you imply. | Thu Dec 28 1989 12:52 | 12 |
|
I have a cousin (a man) whom I really like. He's about 30, and
about two years ago, he got divorced. This summer he got married
again to a woman who's a few years older, owns her own home, and
teaches school. I got a Christmas card from them, and the return address
label said "Mr. and Mrs. <his first name, his last name>. It made
me really sad. I mean, it made me feel like if he hadn't changed
his address in the last two years, he could have just used the same
return labels that he had when he was married to someone else...
Justine
|
903.23 | what to do, what to do.... | SYSENG::BITTLE | hymn to her | Thu Dec 28 1989 16:52 | 26 |
| re: 903.22 (Justine Sullivan)
> I got a Christmas card from them, and the return address
> label said "Mr. and Mrs. <his first name, his last name>.
> It made me really sad.
I'm in a very similar situation, Justine. A female friend from high
school who is married, recently had a baby, and is a Ph.d candidate
in chemical engineering sent me a Christmas card with:
"Mr. and Mrs. <his first name, his last name>
Not being familiar with her husband's first or last name (it was also
a new address), I had *no idea* who was sending me the Christmas card
from reading the envelope.
... as though her entire identity was now "set hidden" behind his.
I'm thinking about writing her about it, but I dunno... We haven't
talked in person or on the phone for about 4 years, and I have
changed a lot in that time. I think it would be almost rude to
talk about why I'm uncomfortable with her address labels when I
haven't spoken with her at a really personal level in years.
nancy b.
|