Fortune Telling Collection - Comprehensive fortune-telling - Sir English abbreviation

Sir English abbreviation

Sir, the English abbreviation is Mr.

Chinese translation:

Sir; Generally used as a habitual honorific title after a man's surname to address Mr. Du; Call someone else's husband or the opposite person your husband; In the old society, the noisy eggplant man who said he was in charge of accounts was a gentleman in a firm; In the old society, he was called a fortune teller who took storytelling, physiognomy, divination and geomantic omen as his profession.

Honorable elders and Prince Yu Shuo are addressed as Mr.-Meihualing in Qingquan Wang Zu; [Teacher]: The teacher teaches classics from the teacher. -Qing Yuanmei's "Sister-in-law"; [Doctor]: Doctor.

Bilingual example:

1, is it? Answer? Pupils? Before? What about you? Become? Answer? Teacher. Be a student first, then a teacher.

2、To? Is it? Answer? Teacher? Yes? That? Anyone here? One? Must? First of all? Is it? Their? Pupils. To be a teacher of the people, be a student of the people first.

May I ask, sir? we? Really? Our? Ball? Back? Sir, can we have the ball back?

4、A? A check? Gift? By who? Sir? Jackson? Used to be. Did you return it? By who? That? The bank. The bank returned the check submitted by Mr. Jackson.

5. what? Working? As? Ann? Assistant? Where to? One? Sir? Ming. He is an assistant of Mr. Ming.

6. May? Me? Suggestion? Answer? White? Ascension, wine? With what? This? Food, sir? May I recommend a white wine for this dish, sir?

What? Mine? Ask, but? Is it? That? Yours Husband? Excuse me for asking, is that your husband?