Miss implies that the woman is unmarried - Ms. carries no such implication.
2006-10-04 14:35:04
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answer #1
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answered by UNITool 6
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under is a quote and and a link that takes you to some sturdy analyzing on the entire venture of Ms., omit, and Mrs. besides the actuality that “Ms.” is obviously a well known, synthetic conflation of “omit” and “Mrs.,” it now serves the smart purpose “Mrs.” as quickly as did: it provides you a deferential call that doesn't require the speaker to have any expertise of the girl’s marital status or age. this would be a sturdy element, through fact such differences, whether properly-known, serve in basic terms to perpetuate the long-superseded theory that grownup women people who're married are by some potential socially better to those that're no longer. in this admire, “Ms.” is honestly a extra useful call than “Mr.,” which says no longer something approximately marital status yet does presume the addressee to be an grownup. a youthful female may be a “Ms.,” yet a youthful boy does no longer regularly be talked approximately as “Mr.”
2016-12-08 08:37:08
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Miss refers to an umarried woman, a divorcee, anyone feminine. Ms. is only the abbreviation of the word Miss, which is usually used before the appelation of a woman. It is a sign of respect or formality in addressing a lady with a word "Ms."
2006-10-04 14:56:33
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answer #3
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answered by vhel 2
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Actually we used to address women either as Miss (unmarried) or Mrs. for married ones. The use of Ms. is recent development that came out of the women's lib. They argue that if men are addressed as Mr. whether they are single or married, then why not a similar address for women. Daaaraaaa . . . - Ms. was born.
Also, Ms. is safer to use you you are not sure that the woman you are addressing is single or not.
2006-10-04 14:40:07
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answer #4
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answered by samchaz1 2
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Miss. is what you call a lady who isnt married, Ms. can mean Mrs (married) or Miss (unmarried), and usually have to do with a professional sense - teacher, etc.
2006-10-04 14:35:43
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answer #5
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answered by agent_orange45177 1
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miss2 (mĭs)
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[Short for mistress.]
noun
Used as a courtesy title before the surname or full name of a girl or single woman. See Usage Note at: Ms.
Used as a form of polite address for a girl or young woman: I beg your pardon, miss.
A young unmarried woman.
Used in informal titles for a young woman to indicate the epitomizing of an attribute or activity: Miss Organization; Miss Opera.
A series of clothing sizes for women and girls of average height and proportions.
Ms.,
also Ms (mĭz)
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[Blend of Miss, Mrs..]
noun: pl., Mses., also Mses, also Mss.
or Mss (mĭz'ĭz)
Used as a courtesy title before the surname or full name of a woman or girl: Ms. Doe; Ms. Jane Doe.
Used in informal titles for a woman to indicate the epitomizing of an attribute or activity: Ms. Fashionable; Ms. Volleyball.
usage note
Usage Note: Many of us think of Ms. or Ms as a fairly recent invention of the women's movement, but in fact the term was first suggested as a convenience to writers of business letters by such publications as the Bulletin of the American Business Writing Association (1951) and The Simplified Letter, issued by the National Office Management Association (1952). Ms. is now widely used in both professional and social contexts. As a courtesy title Ms. serves exactly the same function that Mr. does for men, and like Mr. it may be used with a last name alone or with a full name. Furthermore, Ms. is correct regardless of a woman's marital status, thus relegating that information to the realm of private life, where many feel it belongs anyway. Some women prefer Miss or Mrs., however, and courtesy requires that their wishes be respected.
2006-10-04 14:40:54
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answer #6
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answered by brattybard 3
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Growing up in the 70s when Ms. first became popular. This was the explanation I remember from the time.
Miss Traditional, refers to an unmarried woman.
Ms. was used by women when they did not want it to be known if they were married or not.
2006-10-04 14:38:01
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answer #7
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answered by themaincomputer 2
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Ms. attempts to address a woman in her own right.....not whether or not she's associated with a man. It used to be that a woman was addressed 'through' her man if she was married, and if she wasn't, she was Miss. With Ms., the woman's association with a man is nobody's business, and she doesn't go 'under' his name.
2006-10-04 14:37:10
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answer #8
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answered by maynerdswife 5
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Miss means not yet married
MS is a liberated woman who generally hates men, wears levis, a flannel shirt, has a chain from her belt loop to her wallet, a short-cropped hair cut, wears Timberline boots, and stands up to pee.
or
A divorced woman who hates males, is obsessed with insulting men, HATES it when a man treats her nicely, hates it when a man opens a door for her, "Don't do that...I can open a door by myself!" owns a lot of cats, loves Melissa Ethridge, the Indigo Girls and New Age items around the house.
2006-10-04 14:44:33
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answer #9
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answered by Mr. Curious 6
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What they all said. Miss means unmaaried Ms doesn't mean married or unmarried.
2006-10-04 14:38:21
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answer #10
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answered by Emily 2
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