Using Mr while introducing self.

Status
Not open for further replies.

kumar17

Junior Member
Joined
Sep 12, 2020
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Tamil
Home Country
India
Current Location
India
Is it appropriate to use 'Mr' in front of our name while introducing ourself? I am referring to a male.

I never use that but I saw an educated native speaker introducing himself in a movie as such.
 
It usually isn't appropriate, no, but there are cases when it might be. One such case might be when you mean to make a point that you wish to be addressed that way. A good example is a teacher introducing himself to a new class.
 
... or a surgeon in the UK, reminding his patients that he shouldn't be addressed as Doctor.
 
If you don't have a reason to do it, I would recommend not doing it. I have heard people do it and it sounds pompous.
 
... or a surgeon in the UK, reminding his patients that he shouldn't be addressed as Doctor.

NOT A TEACHER

Here in the States, we address even a dentist as "Doctor."
 
It sounds old-fashioned. What was the movie? When was it set?

(It always helps to tell us the sources of quotes.)
 
It sounds old-fashioned. What was the movie? When was it set?

(It always helps to tell us the sources of quotes.)

It is from a movie called The Shawshank Redemption (1994). The warden introduces himself as 'I am Mr Norton, the warden' to new prisoners. It is a period movie. The scene is supposed to be in 1940s.

[h=3]
[/h]
 
He is making sure the prisoners know how he wants to be addressed.

***

Please tell us the full source in post #1 in future.
 
NOT A TEACHER

Here in the States, we address even a dentist as "Doctor."

It's a kind of reverse snobbery- these doctors are too important to be called a mere doctor.
 
Many people in North America assume, quite wrongly, that all doctors are surgeons. In fact, medical students get only a very brief exposure to surgery during their four years of medical school. Surgery is taught and learned by apprenticeship after people have received their MD degree.
 
NOT A TEACHER

Here in the States, we address even a dentist as "Doctor."

Not only in the States. Long ago when I was newly married my mother-in-law was a still-attractive fifty-year-old in India. She'd been a widow for many years, and one day I said "I hear Dr So-and-so likes you." She replied "Feh! He's only a dentist." :-D
 
Last edited:
The dentists I went to in the UK weren't called doctor. The one I go to in Japan is.
 
In the United States, dentists have MDs.
 
In the UK, medical practitioners of any discipline can only call themselves Doctor if they have a doctorate, but they don't object if their patients mistakenly or flatteringly use that designation – in fact they lap it up.
Few people who practise medicine in the UK have a doctorate, but it is perfectly normal to use the title Doctor. It is not a mistake. All those I have ever known refer to themselves in this way.

The only thing some people object to is when medical practitioners use the title in fields outside medicine. David Owen, a British politician, struck some of us as being rather pretentious when he insisted on being addressed as Dr rather than Mr in the world of politics.
 
Things have evolved here in Canada. In my youth dentists were not addressed as Dr but nowadays they are. I suspect it began when they gained the ability to prescribe opiates and antibiotics.
 
... struck some of us as being rather pretentious when he insisted on being addressed as Dr rather than Mr in the world of politics.

I had a teacher at my old bog-standard comprehensive who insisted on being called Dr Mortimer. I think he must have had a postgrad in history. It always seemed to me that he was trying to distinguish himself from the other teachers. He wasn't a particularly good teacher.
 
My high school was blessed to have a math teacher called Dr. Doctor. I don't think anyone begrudged him the title. :)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top