I always feel awkward when an older person asks me to call them by their first name. In my culture, it is impolite unless you are very close to the person. I know it is a cultural difference and I should just get over it, but it is so hard!
In my culture it's awkward to call the person Mr. Ms. etc because even in the business environment we call people by their first names or even by their nicknames. When we call Mr. it seems too cold, sometimes rude.
It's fucked up that men are only addressed as Mr., while women have to be put in different categories whether if they are married or not or young or orlder. I know it's just a language thing but it really says a lot about our culture.
Ikr! Feels like women are judged based on it. Like it matters if she is married or not? While men are called the same way young, married, not married. So screwed up
It's messed how we have to have different rules for women, because society deems it important to note whether she's single (Miss), or married (Mrs).. whereas men just have (Mr). Byproducts of a patriarchal world.
Very informative and clear . Women at their thirty or above can be called Ma’am, younger ones called miss, how about men under their thirty? Young man?
It's usually only Ms for the woman unless they want to be called Miss or Mrs. Women sometimes don't want to be referred to as either Miss or Mrs as it discloses their marital status whereas a man is referred to as Mr regardless of whether or not he is married. So out of respect, it should be to call someone Ms unless they choose to be called otherwise. Great work though.
So you still make a difference in language if a woman is married in English. We eradicated this from German. We used to call a ‘Miss’ “Fräulein” and a ‘Misses’ “Frau”. But people thought of “Fräulein” as derogative so we changed it.
In my country it’s simple because in my culture we call everyone COMRADE. Doesn’t matter if it’s a man or a woman, if he/she is married or single. Anyway it’s comrade.
Honest question, no rhetoric here: Based on this, I never understood why on an episode of the Brady Bunch, Carole corrected a man addressing her (I don't remember which of the three he used), but she did a quick head gesture towards her family and said what sounded like "Mizz", inferring the spelling, "Ms". What's going on there? I doubt that Florence Henderson would be mistaken on something like that, or would allow writers to misrepresent something to do with social protocol.
It would have been intended as a “statement,” something like “I’m a modern woman, so don’t define me by my marital status. It’s ‘Ms’ (Miz).” When that program was new. “Ms.” was also a new, somwhat political usage.
Do many women born in the 1950's, or earlier perhaps, prefer Mrs over Ms (miz) in a business setting if they are married or widowed, perhaps due to tradition?
I always feel awkward when an older person asks me to call them by their first name. In my culture, it is impolite unless you are very close to the person. I know it is a cultural difference and I should just get over it, but it is so hard!
same
Same
As a Vietnamese I confirm this
In my culture it's awkward to call the person Mr. Ms. etc because even in the business environment we call people by their first names or even by their nicknames. When we call Mr. it seems too cold, sometimes rude.
Where are you from?
Dale LIKE si vienes del PRE BEGINNER 1 DE UPN :v
:v
Aeea loco
esa gente jja
ua-cam.com/video/O4SIkPgJ9Yc/v-deo.html sobrevivan compañeros a este curso xd espero les sirva este video
todo esta en ingles y no entiendo ni mrd de las clases :v
Thank you so much , Ms.Preston .🙂😊👍💪
Lol
You really are THE perfect teacher. Thank you very much!
Awesome explanation. Very clarifying. Thank you, Ms. Preston!
Very helpful! Thank you, Ms. Preston!
Tks you, Ms.Preston, it's very useful.
I love how all her videos are short simple and to the point
Wow!! Excellent delivery. Miss. 😁
Thank you so much. This was a very straight forward and an informative lesson.
Such a voice!
Love this beautiful woman and her full explanation.
Thanks!
Thanks you so much Ms. Preston for your excellent lesson.
Great delivery. Your effort is appreciated.
this is so good. simple and useful. thank you very much, Ms. Preston
great...
I was confused. Now I am clear.
thanks for using lucid language. (from India)
Thanks...i will use this insformation to teach my students
Thanks, it helps a lot Ms. Preston. It was for an interview
thank you for great and clear explanation.
I speak English but I always pronounce Ms. as Miss. I’m pretty sure most people do.
there's barely any difference.. why you do this english? D:
I don’t pronounce it the same way. I think most people don’t. I’m American is that’s a factor.
Beautiful video, thank you! It was very helpful!
I love it this video. It is help me a lot. Thank you
Merci, enfin une explication TRES claire sur ce sujet ! Merci, Merci, Merci !
It's fucked up that men are only addressed as Mr., while women have to be put in different categories whether if they are married or not or young or orlder. I know it's just a language thing but it really says a lot about our culture.
Ikr! Feels like women are judged based on it. Like it matters if she is married or not? While men are called the same way young, married, not married. So screwed up
Nice and helpful
Very clear and straight to the point. Thanks
She explained it very clearly!
great video ,,
Thank's for video Ms
Excellent ❣️
Hello. Thanks for the lesson, lesson lerned.
Love the lesson ❤❤❤❤❤
This was excellent, thank you very much!
Thank you, i’m from Bosnia and Herzegovina!
I'm 25 years old and I'm just now learning this. Why the hell didn't they teach us this in school?
thanks in advance for the explanation..it's really clear and easy to understand.
I just saw it and loved it! Thank you for the clear explanation.
Sweet and Concise.
Thank you ms. preston
It's messed how we have to have different rules for women, because society deems it important to note whether she's single (Miss), or married (Mrs).. whereas men just have (Mr). Byproducts of a patriarchal world.
Agreed!
You can use Ms.
@@anndeecosita3586 yes him can lol
sorry Mr that’s all you get
So nice 👍
kind of got it. Thanks MIZ Preston.
Awesome. Thanks!
Thanks! clear and direct.
Perfect class. I loved it!
Thank you, your lesson helped me a lot💕
good explanations Miz ! thank you so much!
Very helpful, thank you!
Hello..
Nice, thank you!
Thank youu I love you way 😍
Wow! Thanks a lot, we got a good lesson from here
This was super helpful! Thank you
Nice vid
Thank you , Mis
Me gusto, estuve buscando esta explicacion por meses, gracias!
Thank you very much!
Informative
Loved it! :)
Thank you Ma'am.
Zhank you Mizz Prezton.
Thank you so much , Ms.Preston
Sweet video!
Very informative and clear . Women at their thirty or above can be called Ma’am, younger ones called miss, how about men under their thirty? Young man?
"Mister" applies with all male ages.
Is it ok to Say "Mr Jonathan Smith" ? or is the Mr and all other only used with the Surname?
It is probably fine if there might be more than one person with the same last name in the room. Like at an airport.
Love it! Thanks
Awesome
It's usually only Ms for the woman unless they want to be called Miss or Mrs. Women sometimes don't want to be referred to as either Miss or Mrs as it discloses their marital status whereas a man is referred to as Mr regardless of whether or not he is married. So out of respect, it should be to call someone Ms unless they choose to be called otherwise. Great work though.
Thanks!
Thank you Madam
Thank you for this!
What a hot teacher 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Good video and you’re a cute girl
Thank you Ma'am :)
Thank you so much
Helpful
How clear🔥🔥🔥
so at work if you know someone i married you can call them mrs?
If I want to addres a married woman for example Elizabeth but I dont know her husband name. What should I call her?
thx a bunch
PRE BEGINNER 1 DE UPN pense que me iban a explicar mejor
Yo tambien
@@javiercruzmogollon8046 que chucha hablara esa gringa
Thank you!
"Is there a Mr. Gump, Ms Gump???" LOL that's all that came to mind 😅
The miss/ mizz always trips me up
Thank you
Thank you my 💚
se supone que es pre beginner no pre avanced :V
lo que están enseñando es lo más básico.
@@Pedro1043ful no entiendo ni lo basico :v
Jajaja yo soy avanzado solo que quería escuchar la diferencia entre el sonido /s/ y /z/ en yt :v
sixd no entendi casi nada pero se que es ms mr mrrrrrars
@@Pedro1043ful enserio? :(
Please clarify i have doubt ...u are miss or mrs
PRE BEGINNER 1 UPN TRUJILLO
i dont know why this is in my recommended but I'm more concerned because I don't know why I'm watching it
Thanks maam
So you still make a difference in language if a woman is married in English.
We eradicated this from German. We used to call a ‘Miss’ “Fräulein” and a ‘Misses’ “Frau”. But people thought of “Fräulein” as derogative so we changed it.
Can I use miss in single ?
In my country it’s simple because in my culture we call everyone COMRADE.
Doesn’t matter if it’s a man or a woman, if he/she is married or single.
Anyway it’s comrade.
Honest question, no rhetoric here: Based on this, I never understood why on an episode of the Brady Bunch, Carole corrected a man addressing her (I don't remember which of the three he used), but she did a quick head gesture towards her family and said what sounded like "Mizz", inferring the spelling, "Ms". What's going on there? I doubt that Florence Henderson would be mistaken on something like that, or would allow writers to misrepresent something to do with social protocol.
It would have been intended as a “statement,” something like “I’m a modern woman, so don’t define me by my marital status. It’s ‘Ms’ (Miz).” When that program was new. “Ms.” was also a new, somwhat political usage.
@@elizabethmartinez4086 That doesn't track with her gesturing towards her family.
Thanks
Can I write the both letters of MR. In capital letters?
No
…since it’s an abbreviation, not an acronym
As I grew up in rural NC, we pronounced 'Mrs.' as 'misrez'.
I always use my attitude always writing in English
😊
Thanks so much ,I think this is British language
Do many women born in the 1950's, or earlier perhaps, prefer Mrs over Ms (miz) in a business setting if they are married or widowed, perhaps due to tradition?