Monsieur/Madame/Mademoiselle
Mme. Mademoiselle is Mlle.
Mme.It's Mlle. Mme is the abbreviation for Madame.
Mademoiselle - a French salutation which literally means "My Little Lady" Mme - "Madame" - "My Lady"
Madame is abbreviated to Mme, the plural is Mmes.
Mme means Madame (Mrs) and Mlle means Miss i believe. I think you could just say Mlle Roger or Mme Roger whenever needed. (eg. Mrs vs Missus)
No, but you can easily get away with always saying "madame" unless the woman is a young girl.
monsieur is abbreviated as simply M. / Madame is Mme and Mademoiselle is Mlle.
M. plus the name: M. Clérot Don't forget the period, even though Mme and Mlle (madame and mademoiselle) are written without periods.
Lydie Gordey has written: 'Mr, Mme, Mlle' 'Leer'
Yes. Mr. John Doe, Mrs. Jane Doe, Miss Jane Doe.....
I guess... but the correct form would be Mademoiselle, meaning an unmarried lady, like Ms. and Madame would be a married lady, like Mrs. Their abbreviations are Mlle. and Mme.
The French title for a man is monsieur "muh-syuh" and it is abbreviated M., although I have also occasionally seen Mr (no period, just like Mme and Mlle), although I tend to think of M. as the "true" way of writing it.