Style (form of address)
A style of office or form/manner of address, is an official or legally recognized form of address, and may often be used in conjunction with a title. A style, by tradition or law, precedes a reference to a person who holds a post or political office, and is sometimes used to refer to the office itself. An honorific can also be awarded to an individual in a personal capacity. Such styles are particularly associated with monarchies, where they may be used by a wife of an office holder or of a prince of the blood, for the duration of their marriage. They are also almost universally used for presidents in republics and in many countries for members of legislative bodies, higher-ranking judges and senior constitutional office holders. Leading religious figures also have styles.
Examples
Academia
Traditional forms of address at German-speaking universities:- His/Her Magnificence – rector of a university
- His/Her Notability – dean of a faculty
- His/Her Great Honour – rector magnificus of a university
- Highly Learned Sir/Madam – professor or dean of a faculty
- Well Very Learned Sir/Madam – a doctor
- Well Learned Sir/Madam – a doctorandus
- Well Strictly Sir/Madam – a master in laws or a university engineer
- Magnificent Rector – rector of a university
- Amplified Headmaster – dean of a faculty
- Illustrious/Enlightened Professor – a full professor
Government
Diplomats
- His Most Reverend Excellency – apostolic nuncios, because their rank is equal to that of an ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, and they are simultaneously higher prelates.
- His/Her Excellency – most ambassadors, high commissioners and permanent representatives to international organizations; sometimes also the presidents of republics, governors-general, governors of provinces and prime ministers.
- The Honorable – US ambassadors. Typically US ambassadors are addressed as "Your Excellency" by non-US citizens outside the United States.
Judiciaries
- My Lord/Your Honour is used to address judiciary representatives in India.
- The Honorable – Judges and justices in the United States.
- Oral address Your Excellency – Judges of the International Court of Justice.
- Oral address Your Worship – All courts in Australia.
- Oral address Your Honour – All courts in Australia.
United Kingdom
- His/Her Honour Judge X – Circuit judges in England and Wales.
- The Honourable Mr./Ms. Justice X – Judges of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales.
- The Right Honourable Lord/Lady Justice X – Judges of the Court of Appeal of England and Wales.
- The Lord/Lady/Baroness X – Judges in the High Court of Justiciary and the Court of Session in Scotland, and the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom.
- Oral address Your Worship – Justices of the peace in the United Kingdom, usually by solicitors.
Monarchies
- Sire – Reigning kings in the United Kingdom and in Belgium. It has also been used in France, Italy, Germany, Portugal, Sweden and Spain.
- His/Her Imperial Majesty, – Emperors and empresses. Formerly, for example, HIM the Shah of Iran. In modern times, the Emperor of Japan more often uses the simpler style of "Majesty".
- His/Her Imperial and Royal Majesty – Until 1918, the rulers of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, who were Emperors/Empresses of Austria while also Kings/Queens of Hungary, and the German emperors/empresses, who were simultaneously Kings/Queens of Prussia.
- His/Her Apostolic Majesty – the King of Hungary, usually styled Imperial Majesty or Imperial and Royal Majesty as Emperor of Austria and King of Hungary, also sometimes Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty.
- His/Her Britannic Majesty – the British monarch ; used as a formal and official term in diplomacy, the law of nations, and international relations, e.g. in British passports.
- His/Her Most Gracious Majesty – an elaborate version of His/Her Majesty in the United Kingdom, only used in the most formal of occasions.
- His/Her Most Excellent Majesty – another elaborate version of His/Her Majesty in the United Kingdom, mainly used in Acts of Parliament.
- His/Her Catholic Majesty – the King of Spain.
- His/Her Most Christian Majesty – the King of France until 1790 and from 1815 to 1830.
- His/Her Faithful Majesty – the King of Portugal until deposed in 1910.
- His/Her Majesty – kings, queens and some sultans. For example, HM Queen Elizabeth II, HM King Goodwill Zwelithini or HM King Willem-Alexander.
- His/Her Imperial Highness – members of an imperial house. Currently used by the Imperial House of Japan.
- His/Her Imperial and Royal Highness – formerly, archdukes of the House of Habsburg, the German crown prince/princess and members of the deposed Brazilian Imperial Family; also some women entitled to imperial style by birth and to royal style by marriage – some monarchs, members of a royal family ; grand dukes/duchesses who have reigned, consorts of grand dukes, grand ducal heirs apparent and, in Luxembourg, all dynastic male-line cadets; British princes, their dynastic wives, sons, daughters, patrilineal grandsons and granddaughters of Ibn Saud of the House of Saud.
- His/Her Grace is a style used for various high-ranking personages. It was the style used to address Kings of England until King Henry VIII and the King or Queen of Scots up to the Act of Union of 1707, which united the Kingdom of Scotland and the Kingdom of England. Today, the style is used when referring to non-royal dukes and duchesses, and archbishops, in the United Kingdom. For example, His Grace The Duke of Devonshire in the United Kingdom, or His Grace The Archbishop of Canterbury; or Your Grace in spoken or written address. Royal dukes, for example the Duke of York, are addressed with their higher royal style, Royal Highness.
- His/Her Grand Ducal Highness – cadets of some former ruling grand ducal dynasties.
- His/Her Highness – some monarchs, i.e., emirs, some sultans, the Aga Khan; formerly reigning dukes, some maharajahs and rajahs and the members of their dynasties; cadets of most former grand ducal houses; male-line grandchildren and remoter male-line descendants of some kingly dynasties ; Belgium's House of Ligne; members of France's former Foreign Princely class, members of cadet branches of the House of Saud.
- His/Her Ducal Serene Highness – members of the formerly reigning ducal House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.
- His/Her Serene Highness – German: Seine/Ihre Durchlaucht; Italian: Sua Altezza Serenissima; Russian: Ваша светлость. Sovereigns of a principality ; members of formerly reigning princely families ; members of mediatized families headed by a Fürst ; members of several formerly noble, princely families of Austria, Germany, Bohemia, Hungary and Poland; and a few formerly noble families granted the princely title in Imperial Russia.
- His Most Serene Highness – Prince-electors of the Holy Roman Empire.
- His/Her Illustrious Highness ; Italian: Sua Altezza Illustrissima; Spanish: Su Ilustrísima; Russian: Ваше сиятельство. Mediatized counts and, sometimes, members of their families.
- His/Her Princely Grace - formerly style for members of a few noble families of monarchical Germany.
- The High-born – counts in some Scandinavian and Benelux monarchies and, formerly, Germany and Austria.
- The High Well-born – Dutch barons; knights and untitled members of the lower nobility in German-speaking monarchies.
- His/Her Excellency – governors-general, British colonial governors, state officials, and generals of Imperial Russia. Occasionally, prime ministers and cabinet ministers. For example, the Prime Minister of the Netherlands; in Denmark, a few high-ranked nobles.
- Don, from the Latin word dominus, is an honorific title used in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Iberoamerica and the Philippines. The female equivalent is doña, donna, and dona, abbreviated as "Dª" or simply "D." Although originally a title reserved for royalty, select nobles, and church hierarchs, it is now often used as a mark of esteem for a person of personal, social or official distinction, such as a community leader of long standing, a person of significant wealth, or a noble, but it may also be used ironically. As a style, rather than a title or rank, it is used with, and not instead of, a person's name.
- In Portugal and Brazil, Don #Portuguese-speaking lands is used for certain hierarchs of the Roman Catholic Church and for laymen who belong to the royal and imperial families. It was also accorded to members of families of the titled Portuguese nobility. Unless ennobling letters patent specifically authorised its use, Dom was not attributed to members of Portugal's untitled nobility. Since hereditary titles in Portugal descended according to primogeniture, the right to the style of Dom was the only apparent distinction between cadets of titled families and members of untitled noble families.
- Most High, Mighty, and Illustrious Prince – for royal dukes, oral address Your Royal Highness.
- Son of Heaven – Used by Chinese and some Japanese emperors.
- High King
- Great King
- King of Kings – Used by especially Semitic, Persian and some Indian rulers.
- "Taewang" "Greatest of Kings" – was used by the later rulers of the Korean kingdom of Koguryo.
- Lord of the Isles – Used by an heir apparent of the British monarchy.
- High Steward of Scotland – Used by an heir apparent of the British monarchy.
- Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques , sometimes translated as Servant of the Two Noble Sanctuaries or Protector of the Two Holy Cities, is a royal style that has been used by many Islamic rulers including the Ayyubids, the Mamluk Sultans of Egypt, the Ottoman Sultans, and the modern Saudi kings. The title refers to the ruler taking the responsibility of guarding and maintaining the two holiest mosques in Islam, Al-Masjid al-Haram in Mecca and Al-Masjid an-Nabawi in Medina. In Saudi Arabia it's the official title of a king replacing "His Majesty".
- Amīr al-Mu'minīn, usually translated Commander of the Faithful or Leader of the Faithful, is the Arabic style of some Caliphs and other independent sovereign Muslim rulers that claim legitimacy from a community of Muslims. It has been claimed as the title of rulers in Muslim countries and empires and is still used for some Muslim leaders. The use of the title does not necessarily signify a claim to caliphate as it is usually taken to be, but described a certain form of activist leadership which may have been attached to a caliph but also could signify a level of authority beneath that. The Ottoman sultans, in particular, made scant use of it. Moreover, the term was used by men who made no claim to be caliphs. Currently used by the Caliph of ISIS Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, The Ahmadiyya Muslim Caliph, Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the King of Morocco, the Sultan of Sokoto, and the supreme leaders of the Afghan Taliban.
- Kabiyesi – Used by the Obas of Yorubaland, other aboriginal Yoruba high chiefs of royal background, and their counterparts in the tribe's diaspora communities.
Styles and titles of deposed monarchs
While this rule is generally observed, and indeed some exiled monarchs are allowed diplomatic passports by their former realm, other republics officially object to the use of such titles which are, nonetheless, generally accorded by extant monarchical regimes. In 1981, the then Greek President Konstantinos Karamanlis declined to attend the wedding of Charles, Prince of Wales when it was revealed that Greece's deposed monarch, a cousin of the Prince, had been referred to as "King" in his invitation. The Hellenic Republic has challenged King Constantine's right to use his title and his passport was revoked in 1994 because he did not use a surname, as his passport at the time stated "Constantine, former King of the Hellenes.". However, Constantine II now travels in and out of Greece on a Danish diplomatic passport as a descendant of Christian IX of Denmark, by the name Constantino de Grecia.
Republics
- His/Her Excellency – Presidents of republics In some countries also the prime minister, ministers, governors, ambassadors and high commissioners also use this style.
- The President of the United States is properly directly addressed as "Mr. President" and introduced as "The President of the United States"; however, His/Her/Your Excellency may properly be used in written communications and is sometimes used in official documents.
- The custom in France is to call office holders acting within their official capacity M. or Mme. followed by the name of their offices. Thus, the President of the Republic is called M. le président or M. le président de la République if a male, and Mme... if a female. Styles such as "excellency" or similar are not used, except for talking about foreign dignitaries. Traditionally after "Madame", the name of the office is not put into the feminine form, but this is becoming less common.
- In Italy, members of the lower house of the Parliament of Italy are styled Honourable. The correct form to address a member of the upper house is Senator.
- The incumbent president of Finland is addressed Herra/Rouva Tasavallan Presidentti, while a former president is addressed as just Herra/Rouva Presidentti.
- The style used for the President of Ireland is normally His Excellency/Her Excellency ; sometimes people may orally address the President as 'Your Excellency', or simply 'President'.
- During the Republic of the United Netherlands, the States-General were collectively addressed as "Their High and Mighty Lords".
- The Honourable – Presidents, prime ministers, ministers, governors, members of parliament, senate and congress in some countries.
Medicine
- Doctor – In the United Kingdom, university degrees supporting medical and dental licensure are all bachelor's degrees. These graduates are addressed as 'doctor' by courtesy and convention.
- Mr/Miss/Mrs – Surgeons in the UK revert to the title 'Mr', 'Miss' or 'Mrs' after obtaining the postgraduate qualification MRCS. Other doctors, on the other hand, retain the title 'Doctor' after obtaining other postgraduate qualifications, such as MRCP.
Nautical and aeronautical
- Captain – a person who commands and is responsible for the lives of crew and passengers on a naval or civil vessel or aircraft. In the US military, captain is used regardless of the actual rank of the person being addressed. For example, on a US naval vessel commanded by someone holding a rank of lieutenant commander or lower is addressed as "Captain", in reference to his position in command of the ship, not his military rank. This would apply even to an enlisted man in charge of a small boat.
Religious
- His Holiness, oral address Your Holiness, or Holy Father – the Pope and the Pope Emeritus.
- His All Holiness, oral address Your All Holiness – the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople.
- His Holiness, oral address Your Holiness – the Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, Patriarch of Peć and the Serbs, Catholicos of All Armenians, Catholicos-Patriarch of All Georgia, Catholicos of the Holy See of Cilicia of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Malankara Orthodox Catholicos and some other patriarchs of the Christian Church.
- His Holiness, oral address Your Holiness – the Dalai Lama, the Panchen Lama, the Karmapa, the Sakya Trizin, and other holders of certain other Tibetan Buddhist lineages.
- His Highness the Aga Khan, oral address Your Highness and then Sir – The Imam of the Shia Ismaili Muslims.
- His Beatitude or The Most Blessed, oral address Your Beatitude – Eastern Orthodox, Syriac Orthodox Catholicos of India, Oriental Orthodox and Roman Catholic patriarchs, Macedonian Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Major Archbishop of Kyiv-Halych. If they have been elevated to the cardinalate by the Pope, they use the traditional "His Eminence" like other cardinals.
- His Most Eminent Highness, oral address Your Most Eminent Highness – The Prince and Grand Master of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.
- His Eminence, oral address Your Eminence or Most Reverend Eminence – Roman Catholic cardinals
- His Eminence or The Most Reverend, oral address Your Eminence – Eastern Orthodox metropolitans and archbishops who are not the first hierarch of an autocephalous church;
- His Eminence – Certain high lamas or rinpoches in Tibetan Buddhism as well as presiding head bishops or priests of Japanese Buddhist schools.
- His Eminence – The Sultan of Sokoto, spiritual leader of Nigeria's Muslims, as well as those of his fellow Fula high chiefs that choose not to style themselves as HRHs.
- His Excellency or The Most Reverend, oral address Your Excellency – Roman Catholic archbishops and bishops in the United States; or,
- His Grace or The Most Reverend, oral address Your Grace – Roman Catholic archbishops in Commonwealth countries; and Roman Catholic bishops in Ireland, Mar Thoma Metropolitans
- His Grace or The Right Reverend, oral address Your Grace – Eastern Orthodox bishops.
- Kabiyesi – The Obas of Yorubaland, other aboriginal Yoruba high chiefs of royal background, and their counterparts in the tribe's diaspora communities.
- His Lordship or The Right Reverend, oral address My Lord – Anglican and Roman Catholic bishops in Commonwealth countries.
- The Most Reverend and Right Honourable, oral address Your Grace – Church of England archbishops who are privy counsellors, usually the Archbishops of Canterbury and York
- The Most Reverend , oral address Your Grace – Anglican archbishops, primates, metropolitans and presiding bishops. Also moderators.
- The Most Reverend , oral address My Lord – Church of Ireland Bishop of Meath and Kildare
- The Most Reverend, oral address Presiding Bishop – the Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church Ghana
- The Most Reverend, oral address Bishop – the Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States
- The Right Reverend and Right Honourable Monsignor, oral address Monsignor, or according to personal preference – Prelate of Honour who is also a privy counsellor.
- The Right Reverend and Right Honourable, oral address Bishop or My Lord – Church of England bishops who are members of the Privy Council, usually the Bishop of London.
- The Right Reverend, oral address Bishop or My Lord – other Church of England bishops
- The Right Reverend, oral address Bishop – bishops Episcopal Church
- The Right Reverend – Moderator of the United Church of Canada
- The Right Reverend Father, oral address Father – Eastern Orthodox archimandrites.
- The Right Reverend, oral address Father or Father Abbot – Roman Catholic abbots.
- The Right Reverend, oral address Bishop – diocesan bishop of the Methodist Church Ghana
- Bishop, oral address Bishop – an area bishop in the United Methodist Church. The Right Reverend has never been pervasive in the United Methodist Church.
- His Divine Worship, or Divine Worship: The Bishop, oral address Your Divine Worship, afterwards My Lord, My Lord Bishop, or Bishop – a bishop in one of the Personal Ordinariates for former Anglicans, especially the Personal Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter.
- The Very Reverend, oral address Father – Catholic vicars general, judicial vicars, judges, rectors of seminaries, vicars forane, episcopal vicars, general superiors of religious orders of priests, provincial superiors, priors of monasteries or friaries
- The Very Reverend Father, oral address Father – Eastern Orthodox archpriests
- The Very Reverend, oral address Mr/Madam Dean or Mr/Madam Provost, as appropriate, or Very Reverend Sir/Madam – Anglican deans and provosts of cathedrals, the deans of Westminster Abbey and St George's Chapel, Windsor, and, for historical reasons, a few parish priests, such as the Dean of Bocking. Sometimes an Anglican cathedral dean has previously been a bishop, in which case he or she is styled as a bishop, but on formal occasions may be addressed Mr/Madam Dean.
- The Very Reverend, oral address Very Reverend Sir/Madam or Mr/Madam Dean – Deans of some Anglican seminaries, especially those in the USA
- The Very Reverend, oral address Osofo Panin – Superintendent minister in the Methodist Church Ghana
- The Very Reverend, oral address Reverend – former moderators of the United Church of Canada
- The Reverend Monsignor, oral address Monsignor – Catholic Church protonotaries apostolic, honorary prelates, chaplains of his holiness
- The Venerable, oral address Venerable Sir/Madam or Mr/Madam Archdeacon – Anglican archdeacons
- Venerable, oral address "Venerable" or "Venerable <name or title>" – fully ordained Buddhist monks and nuns, the title of Venerable Master or Most Venerable is sometimes appended for senior monks and nuns or monks/nuns acting in their capacity as an abbot/abbess of a monastery
- The Reverend and Right Honourable – Protestant ordained ministers who are members of the Privy Council
- The Reverend the Honourable, oral address according to ecclesiastical or other status – ordained son of an earl, viscount, or baron, or ordained daughter of a viscount or baron
- The Very Reverend, oral address: "Overseer" – in the Anglican-Apostolic Communion tradition, the overseer is the lowest level of prelate, with oversight to a specific work or department, directly responsible to the primate/presiding bishop or an ordinary/diocesan bishop.
- The Reverend ; some Jewish cantors also use this style, almost all Buddhist ministers in Japan use this style
- The Reverend Canon, oral address Canon – Catholic and Anglican canons
- The Reverend Doctor, oral address Father or Doctor – Priests and other ordained clergy with a doctorate
- The Reverend Father, oral address Father – Catholic priests
- The Reverend Mother, oral address Mother – Abbesses
- The Reverend Deacon, oral address Deacon Catholic permanent Deacons.
- The Reverend Mister, oral address Deacon – Catholic transitional deacons, i.e. those preparing for priesthood. Transitional deacons belonging to religious orders are titled Reverend Brother,
- Mother, oral address Mother – heads of some female Catholic religious convents and other communities who are not abbesses
- Mister, oral address Mister – Catholic Sulpician priests
- Mister, oral address often Mister – Catholic seminarians and scholastics of some religious orders.
- Father
- Brother, oral address Brother – Catholic members of religious orders under vows who are not priests.
- Sister, oral address Sister – Catholic members of religious orders under vows who are not abbesses.
- Elder: used generally for male missionaries of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and for members of the adult leadership known as the general authorities. Although most all male adults of the LDS church are elders, the title is reserved for the prior mentioned groups.
- Grand Rabbi, oral address Rabbi – Hasidic rabbis, who are scions of a Hasidic Dynasty.
- Don from Latin dominus, is an honorific title used in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Iberoamerica and the Philippines. The female equivalent is doña, donna, and dona, abbreviated "Dª" or simply "D." Although originally a title reserved for royalty, select nobles, and church hierarchs, it is now often used as a mark of esteem for a person of personal, social or official distinction, such as a community leader of long standing, a person of significant wealth, or a noble, but may also be used ironically. As a style, rather than a title or rank, it is used with, and not instead of, a person's name.
- Dom is an honorific prefixed to the given name. It derives from the Latin Dominus. It is used in English for certain Benedictine and Carthusian monks, and for members of certain communities of Canons Regular. Examples include Benedictine monks of the English Benedictine Congregation. The equivalent female usage for such a monastic is "Dame".
- *Dom has historically been used on occasions in French, as an honorific for Benedictine monks, such as the famous Dom Pérignon.
- Rabbi, oral address Rabbi – rabbis
- Grand Ayatullah, oral address Ayatullah or Ayatullah al-Uzma – Shia Ayatullahs, who have accomplished the highest religious jurisprudent knowledge degree called as marja' and some people officially follow them.
- Ayatullah, oral address Ayatullah – Shia religious degree who has accomplished a religious high course of lessons and is capable of individually issuing religious verdicts.
- Amīr al-Mu'minīn, usually translated Commander of the Faithful or Leader of the Faithful, is the Arabic style of some Caliphs and other independent sovereign Muslim rulers that claim legitimacy from a community of Muslims. It has been claimed as the title of rulers in Muslim countries and empires and is still used for some Muslim leaders. The use of the title does not necessarily signify a claim to caliphate as it is usually taken to be, but described a certain form of activist leadership which may have been attached to a caliph but also could signify a level of authority beneath that. The Ottoman sultans, in particular, made scant use of it. Moreover, the term was used by men who made no claim to be caliphs. Currently used by the Caliph of ISIS Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, The Ahmadiyya Muslim Caliph, Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the King of Morocco, The Sultan of Sokoto, The supreme leaders of the Afghan Taliban.
- Cantor, oral address Cantor – Jewish cantors
- Reverend, oral address Reverend, Mister or Brother – ordained ministers/pastors
- Pastor, oral address 'Pastor" – minister responsible for caring for the "flock" in Lutheran churches
- Pandit – Hindu priests
- Swami – in Hinduism an ascetic or yogi who has been initiated into a religious monastic order. Informally, "Swamiji".
- Officers of The Salvation Army are addressed by their rank, e.g. "Captain", "Major", etc.
- A wide variety of titles for Neo-pagan religions; Lord/Lady, Father/Mother, and High Priest/Priestess are common
In different countries
Australia
- His/Her Majesty – The King or Queen of Australia
- His/Her Excellency The Honourable – Governor-General and his or her spouse, and The Honourable or His/Her Excellency for the rest of state governors
- The Honourable – all current and former governors-general and Administrators of the Northern Territory, Justices of the High Court of Australia, the Federal Court of Australia, the Family Court of Australia and state supreme courts
- The Honourable – all current and former members of the Federal Executive Council and all current members of state executive councils and certain former members of state executive councils and long-serving members of state Legislative Councils that have been given the right to keep the title by permission of the governor of that state.
- The Right Honourable
- His/Her Honour – magistrates and judges in appellate, district and county courts.
- The Right Honourable the Lord Mayor – Lord mayors of Australian cities
- His/Her Worship – Administrators of territories, magistrates and mayors.
- His/Her Grace – Australian dukes
- His Eminence – Australian cardinals
- His/Her Lordship – Australians who are members of the nobility or are otherwise entitled to be addressed in this manner, for example the daughter of the Earl of Dunmore
Brunei
- Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Majesty – for Sultan and his first royal consort. The style is added more depends on the situation:
- *Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri Sultan, for Sultan before coronation.
- *Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri Baginda Sultan, for Sultan after coronation.
- *Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri Pengiran Isteri for the queen consort before coronation
- *Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri Baginda Raja Isteri for the queen consort after coronation
- *Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri Raja — for the second wife of the Sultan during coronation
- Kebawah Duli, for a Sultan that has not gone through puberty.
- Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri Pengiran Isteri, for the second wife of the Sultan after coronation
- Duli Yang Teramat Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Royal Highness – for the Crown Prince and his consort and for the abdicated Sultan and his consort.
- * Duli Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Seri Begawan Sultan — for Sultan that abdicated from the throne
- * Duli Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Suri Seri Begawan Raja — for the Sultan's consort when the Sultan abdicated from the throne
- * Duli Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Seri Pengiran Muda Mahkota — for the Crown Prince
- * Duli Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Seri Pengiran Anak Isteri — for the Crown Prince's consort
- Yang Teramat Mulia , to His or Her Royal Highness – for the children of the Sultan that were born by their royal mother
- * Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Seri Duli Pengiran Muda — for the Sultan's son that has full royal blood
- * Yang Teramat Mulia Paduka Seri Pengiran Anak Puteri— for the Sultan's daughter by a royal mother
- * Yang Teramat Mulia Pengiran Babu Raja — for the Queen Consort's mother
- Yang Amat Mulia , for the consort of a royal prince and their children, and for the Sultan's children by their commoner mother
- * Yang Amat Mulia Pengiran Anak Isteri — for the consort of the Sultan's son
- * Yang Amat Mulia Pengiran Muda — for the son of the Sultan's son
- * Yang Amat Mulia Pengiran Anak — for the children of the Sultan that were born by a commoner mother; daughter of the Sultan's son ; children of the Sultan's daughter ; children of the Sultan's children
- Yang Mulia
- * Yang Mulia Pengiran Anak — for the children that both parents hold the title Pengiran Anak
- * Yang Mulia Pengiran — for the children of a Pengiran Anak and his wife that is not also a Pengiran Anak; non-royal Pengiran
Canada
- His/Her Majesty – King/Queen of Canada
- His/Her Excellency – Governor General, vice-regal consort, ambassadors, and high commissioners in office
- The Right Honourable – Governors general, prime ministers, chief justices of Canada and certain eminent Canadians for life
- His/Her Honour – Lieutenant-governors and viceregal consorts in office
- The Honourable
- *For life – Members of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, senators and lieutenant-governors
- *In office only – Speaker of the House of Commons, ministers of the Crown, judges of provincial courts, premiers of provinces and territories, territorial commissioners, and provincial and territorial cabinet ministers
- **Note: Members of Parliament are often referred to in the House of Commons as "the honourable member for " but do not use the style honourable with their name.
- The Honourable Mr/Madam Justice – Chief justices of province and justices of superior courts
- His/Her Worship – Justices of the peace, magistrates and municipal leaders in office
New Zealand
- Partial source:
- His/Her Majesty – King/ Queen of New Zealand
- His/Her Excellency – the current Governor-General.
- The Right Honourable – the current and former prime ministers, the current and former Speakers of the Parliament of New Zealand, the current and former chief justices, the current and former governors general, and those who were appointed to the Privy Council of the United Kingdom prior to New Zealand ceasing appeals to it in 2003.
- The Honourable – the current and former ministers of the Crown, the current and former judges of the Supreme, High and Appeal courts
- His/Her Honour – judges of district courts
- His/Her Worship – mayors of territorial authorities and justices of the peace.
Jamaica
India
His Excellency/Her Excellency is used before the name of President of India as well as before of governors of the states. However, it is not mandatory for an Indian citizen to use this style to address the president or the governors after a notification from the President House. But it is mandatory for foreigners to address the president and governors.Your Honour/My Lord – It is used before the names of judges but now it is also not mandatory. The Supreme Court in a hearing said that people need to respect the judges and "Sir" is sufficient for it.
Royal styles in India
With a long history of rulers, there are many styles which vary from territory to territory and languages for royal families in India, commonly Maharaja, Maharani whereas for their successors Raja, Rani. Rajkumar and Rajkumari.Others include Hukam, Sardar, Badshah, Vajeer-e-Aala etc.
African traditional rulers
In most of Africa, many styles are used by traditional royalty.Generally the vast majority of the members of these royal families use the titles Prince and Princess, while the higher ranked amongst them also use either Highness or Royal Highness to describe secondary appellations in their native languages that they hold in their realms, appellations that are intended to highlight their relative proximity to their thrones, either literally in the sense of the extant kingships of the continent or symbolically in the sense of its varied chiefships of the name, and which therefore serve a function similar to the said styles of Highness and Royal Highness.
For example, the Yoruba people of West Africa usually make use of the word Kabiyesi when speaking either to or about their sovereigns and other royals. As such, it is variously translated as Majesty, Royal Highness or Highness depending on the actual rank of the person in question, though a literal translation of the word would read more like this: He whose words are beyond questioning, Great Lawgiver of the Nation.
Within the Zulu Kingdom of Southern Africa, meanwhile, the monarch and other senior royals are often addressed as uNdabezitha meaning He Who Concerns the Enemy, but rendered in English as Majesty in address or reference to the king and his consorts, or Royal Highness in the case of other senior members of the royal family.
Hong Kong
The Chief Executive is styled as The Honourable.Certain senior government officials, President of the Legislative Council, members of the Executive Council, and members of the judiciary are also styled as The Honourable.
Ireland
In Ireland, holders of offices with Irish names are usually addressed in English by its nominative form, though the Irish vocative forms differ. The President may be styled 'His/Her Excellency' and addressed 'Your Excellency', or simply 'President'. The titles 'Minister' and 'Senator' are used as forms of address; only the latter as a style. A TD is formally addressed and styled as 'Deputy', though often simply Mr, Mrs, etc. Similarly, county and city councillors can be addressed as 'Councillor', abbreviated Cllr. which is used as a written style, but are just as frequently addressed as Mr, Mrs etc.Malaysia
- Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia Seri Paduka Baginda , equivalent to His or Her Majesty – for the King and the Queen.
- Duli Yang Maha Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Majesty – for the Sultan and the Queen of Johor
- Kebawah Duli Yang Maha Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Royal Highness – for –
- * the Sultan and the Sultanah of Kedah
- * the Sultan of Pahang
- * the Sultan and Sultanah of Terengganu
- * the Sultan of Kelantan
- * the Regent of Pahang
- Duli Yang Maha Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Royal Highness – for –
- * the Yang di-Pertuan Besar and the Tunku Ampuan Besar of Negeri Sembilan
- * the Raja and the Raja Perempuan of Perlis
- * the Sultan and the Tengku Permaisuri of Selangor
- * the Raja Permaisuri of Perak
- * the Sultanah of Pahang
- * the Raja Perempuan of Kelantan
- * the Regent of Perak
- * the abdicated Sultan of Kelantan
- Duli Yang Maha Mulia Paduka Seri, equivalent to His for the Sultan of Perak
- Yang Maha Mulia equivalent to His or Her Royal Highness – for –
- * the Regent of Kelantan
- * all widowed consorts
- * the abdicated Queen of Kelantan
- Kebawah Duli Yang Teramat Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Highness – for the Crown Prince of Pahang and the Regent of Terengganu and their consorts.
- Duli Yang Teramat Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Highness – for all Crown Princes, Perak and their consorts excluding Pahang, Terengganu and Johor.
- Yang Teramat Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Highness – for senior royal family members and royal representatives in Negeri Sembilan.
- Duli Yang Amat Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Highness – for –
- * the Crown Prince of Johor.
- * the Raja di-Hilir of Perak
- * the Raja Puan Muda of Perak
- Yang Amat Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Highness – for royal family members.
- Yang Mulia , equivalent to His or Her Highness – for extended royal family members.
- Tuan Yang Terutama , equivalent to His or Her Excellency – for governors, high commissioners and ambassadors.
- Yang Amat Berhormat , equivalent to the Right Honourable – for the Prime Minister, the Deputy Prime Minister and the Chief Minister.
- Yang Berhormat , equivalent to the Honourable – for ministers, deputy ministers, members of Parliament and State Legislatures.
- Yang Amat Arif , equivalent to the Right Honourable – for chief judges.
- Yang Arif , equivalent to His or Her Honour – for judges and judicial commissioners.
- Yang Amat Dihormati , equivalent to the Right Honourable – for royal representatives in districts of Selangor.
- Yang Dihormati , equivalent to the Honourable – for high and senior police officers.
- Yang Amat Berbahagia – for spouses of the Prime Minister, the Deputy Prime Minister, Chief Ministers and persons with the title of "Tun".
- Yang Berbahagia – for persons with the title of "Tan Sri" and "Datuk", or equivalent, and their spouses.
- Yang Amat Berusaha – for higher public officers without any title.
- Yang Berusaha – for high public officers without any title.
- Yang Amat Setia – for high military officers without any title.
- Yang Setia – for senior military officers without any title.
- Sahibus Samahah , equivalent to His Eminence – for State Muftis.
- Sahibul Fadhilah , equivalent to His Grace – for State Deputy Muftis, Qadhis and senior Ulamas.
- Sahibus Saadah, equivalent to Yang Berbahagia'' – for the Director of Islamic Affairs of Selangor.
Morocco
- His Majesty – The King of Morocco.
- His Imperial Majesty – The Sultan of Morocco.
- His/Her Royal Highness – Prince and princess of Morocco.
- His/Her Highness – Prince and princess of Morocco.
Philippines
- His/Her Excellency – The President of the Philippines. The title in Tagalog is "Ang Mahal na Pangulo". The honorific for the President of the Philippines adopted from the title of the Governor-General of the Philippines during Spanish and American colonial periods. The President may be addressed as "Your Excellency" or more informally as "Mr. President" or "Madam President".
- The Honorable – The Vice President of the Philippines, Members of the Congress of the Philippines, Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines, Governors and Vice Governors of Provinces, Mayors and Vice Mayors of Cities or Municipalities, and other elected or appointed officials in the government.The title is also conferred to elected and appointed officials of student or other people's organizations that has great participation in creating, implementing, and interpreting policies of the organization. The title in Tagalog is "Ang Kagalanggalang". In Senate and congressional inquiries and impeachment procedures, senators and representatives are mostly addressed as Your Honor, because their functions have the powers of judges in asking questions.
- His Magnificence The Very Reverend - The Rector Magnificus of the Pontifical and Royal University of Santo Tomas
- Sir/Madam – Common informal manner of address
- Illustrious Knight, Sir/Lady- Titles for members of the Order of the Knights of Rizal, the Philippines' only order of knighthood created by law.
- In the Sultanate of Sulu, the Sultan is addressed as Paduka Mahasari Maulana al Sultan.
Spain
- His/Her Majesty – the monarch of Spain, when referred to as monarch. When referred to as Head of State, he is usually styled His Excellency the Head of State.
- His/Her Royal Highness – the Prince of Asturias and the Infantes.
- His/Her Excellency – spouses and children of the Infantes, Grandees of Spain, ministers, either from the central government or from autonomous government, as well as regional presidents. Mayors and town councils.
- His/Her Illustriousness – marquesses, counts, viscounts, junior ministers either from the central government or from autonomous government, justices, certain prosecutors, members of the royal academies and the holders of certain Spanish decorations.
- His/Her Most Excellent and Magnificent Lord – Rector of a university.
- His Lordship/Her Ladyship – barons, seigneurs, members of parliament, judges.
Thailand
- His/Her Majesty – The King and Queen of Thailand.
- His/Her Royal Highness – Prince and princess of Thailand from "Chao-Fa" ' to "Phra Chao Worawongse Ther Phra Ong Chao" . This style is also used for princess consort.
- His/Her Highness – Prince and princess of Thailand of the rank "Phra Worawong Ther Phra Ong Chao" ' which are born in the title as Mom Chao to whom the king later granted this higher title, either as recognition of merit, or as a special favour.
- His/Her Serene Highness – Prince and princess of title Mom Chao /Mom Chao Ying is the most junior class still considered royalty. This is normally when surnames first appear among royal lineages. They are either: Children of a male Chao Fa and a commoner.Children of a male Phra Ong Chao. Informally, they are styled "Than Chai"... /"Than Ying"... .
- The Honourable – Mom Rajawongse is the title assumed by children of male Mom Chao. The title is pronounced "Mom Rachawong". Informally, they may be styled as "Khun Chai".../ "Khunying"... .
United Kingdom
- Sir – males, formally if they have an English knighthood or if they are a baronet.
- Dame – female knights and baronetess in their own right.
- Lord – male marquesses, earls, viscounts, and barons, as well as some of the fruit-of-their-loins..
- Lady – females married to knights. The title is also used for the wives of marquesses, earls, viscounts, and barons.
- His Grace – Dukes. Occasionally the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Archbishop of York and other archbishops are also styled His Grace.
- His Royal Highness, oral address Your Royal Highness – royal princes.
- The Right Honourable signifies membership of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom, but does not confer any other title, and is also a formal style of address for certain holders of peerages, namely earls, viscounts, barons, and Lords of Parliament.
- The Right Honourable and Reverend – as the previous explanation, used if the holder is also an ordained clergyman.
- The Honourable – younger sons of earls, all children of viscounts and barons/Lords of Parliament
- The Right Honourable the Spiritual and Temporal Lords in the House of Lords.
- The Right Honourable the Lord-Commissioners of the Board of Admiralty.
- The Most Honourable – marquesses, The Lords of His Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council.
- His Worship is an honorific prefix for mayors, justices of the peace and magistrates in present or former Commonwealth realms. In spoken address, these officials are addressed as Your Worship or referred to as His Worship. In Australia all states now use Your Honour as the form of address for magistrates.
- The Much Honoured – Scottish feudal barons and lairds
Styles existing through marriage in the United Kingdom
Styles and titles can change when a marriage is dissolved. The Lady Diana Frances Spencer held the style Her Royal Highness during her marriage to HRH The Prince of Wales and the title Princess of Wales. When the couple divorced she lost her style: she became instead Diana, Princess of Wales..
When applied to the current Princess of Wales, inclusion of a definite article, is, like HRH, part of the style which accompanies the title. When Charles was remarried to Camilla Parker-Bowles in compliance with the Royal Marriages Act, she lawfully became HRH The Princess of Wales but, as was the announced intention prior to the couple's wedding, she continues to use the lesser title derived from her husband's Duchy of Cornwall and is known as HRH The Duchess of Cornwall because the strong association to the late Diana, Princess of Wales.
From the divorce until her death in 1997, Diana, Princess of Wales ceased to hold any royal style, although the monarch declared that she remained a Princess of the United Kingdom and in occasions when members of the Royal Family appeared in public, she continued to be accorded the same royal precedence.
When Sarah Ferguson was divorced from her husband, HRH Prince Andrew, Duke of York, she too lost her HRH style, the rank as a British Princess and was re-styled as "Sarah, Duchess of York".
In 1936, Wallis Simpson was denied the HRH style by George VI when she married his older brother, the former Edward VIII, who became HRH the Duke of Windsor following his abdication and receipt of a peerage.
United States
Most current and former elected federal and state officials and judges in the U.S. are styled "The Honorable " in writing, . Many are addressed in conversation as "Mister " or "Madam " or simply by + e.g., "Senator Jones" or "Commissioner Smith".Continued use of a title after leaving office depends on the office: those of which there is only one at a time are only officially used by the current office holder. However, titles for offices of which there are many concurrent office holders are retained for life: A retired US Army general is addressed as "General " officially and socially for the rest of their life. Military retirees are entitled to receive pay and are still counted as members of the United States Armed Forces. Accordingly, all retired military ranks are retained for life pursuant to Title 10 of the United States Code. In the case of the US President, while the title is officially dropped after leaving office – e.g., Dwight Eisenhower reverted to his prior style "General Eisenhower" in retirement – it is still widely used as an informal practice; e.g., Jimmy Carter is still often called President Carter. The Vice President is typically referred to as "former Vice President", such as "former Vice President Joe Biden". Similarly, governors may be addressed in later life as "Governor ", particularly if running for further political office. Mitt Romney, for example, was frequently referred to as "Governor Romney" during his 2012 presidential campaign, despite leaving the office of Governor of Massachusetts in 2007.
- Judges are styled "The Honorable " in writing, and orally in court as "Your Honor", or as "Judge Smith". Chief justices of supreme courts are addressed orally as "Mr. or Madame Chief Justice" or "Chief Justice"; associate justices as "Justice Jones", or "Justice".
- Mayors are styled "The Honorable " in writing. In municipalities, mayors are addressed in conversation as "Your Honor". This may be a vestige of the fact that the mayors were also magistrates of the court system.
- His/Her Excellency was once customarily used of governors of states, though this has given way to "The Honorable", the form used to address all elected officials in the United States. "His/Her Excellency" has continued in the Commonwealths of Massachusetts and Virginia and the states of South Carolina, Georgia, New Hampshire, and Connecticut.
- Members of the House of Representatives are similarly styled in writing as "The Honorable ". Orally they are traditionally addressed as "Mr./Ms. ", but as a practice are sometimes addressed as "Representative " or "Congressman/Congresswoman " when it is necessary or desirable to specify the member's status. It is advisable to follow the preference of the individual official. Following precedence in Westminster style of parliament, when writing their own names, especially on stationery and franks, Representatives have upon occasion followed their names with "M.C.". Senators similarly are addressed in writing as "The Honorable " and orally as "Senator Smith". Where Representatives may have used "M.C.", Senators have used "U.S.S.". However, neither form is currently used by members in Washington, DC. On the actual floor of the houses during debate, members commonly refer to one another as the gentleman/gentlewoman "from such-and-such a state" – "As my friend, the distinguished gentleman from Ohio, just said..." or "I yield three minutes to the gentleman from New York, Mr. Smith". In debate, senators sometimes refer to colleagues as the junior or senior senator from a state, as in "I disagree with my dear friend, the junior senator from Ohio...". Senators also commonly use "my friend from X" and "the distinguished senator from X".
- While the term "Esquire", abbreviated "Esq." after the name, has no legal meaning in the U.S. and may be used by anyone, it is correctly used when addressing lawyers in correspondence as an indication of their profession. At least one American jurisdiction, the District of Columbia, limits the use of "Esquire" to licensed attorneys. Although some authorities previously urged that use of "Esq." should be restricted to male lawyers, today the term is used for both male and female attorneys. The academic post-nominal J.D. may be used by graduates of law schools who are not members of the bar of any state or who are working outside the legal profession.
- In academic fields, it is customary in the U.S. to refer to those holding any level of professorship as "Professor" – as in "Professor Jones" – orally or in writing. In writing, "professor" is often abbreviated as "Prof.", as in "Prof. Jones". Those holding academic doctorates are frequently referred to as "Dr. Jones."
- Military personnel of any functionality are always addressed by rank + name; with the exception of chaplains, who are addressed as "Chaplain" and are addressed in writing with their rank in parentheses, e.g.: "Chaplain Jones". An exception to this is in the Navy, where in writing the rank is either not used, or is used before the person's name with the corps designator "CHC" indicating the officer is a chaplain put behind their name. e.g.: "LT George Burdell, CHC, USN". In the United States Navy, there is an internal practice aboard ships that junior officers who are not in command may be addressed by their rank or as "Mister/Miss X" as in "Lieutenant Junior Grade Smith" or "Miss Smith". This practice is also followed within the United States Coast Guard, both aboard ship and ashore. Junior officers in both services are understood to be those of lieutenant commander and below. Senior officers are addressed by their rank as in "Commander Smith" or "Admiral Smith". While officially this manner of address is supposed to be from a senior rank to a junior rank, i.e. captain to lieutenant, in practice it is not unknown for enlisted personnel to refer to junior officers as Mister as well. While commonly referred to by their rank, i.e. Seaman/Airman/Fireman/Petty Officer X or Chief X, on formal occasions, e.g. weddings, an enlisted man's full title is sometimes used, starting with their rating, then their rank, and their name, e.g. Electronics Technician Second Class X or Chief Gunner's Mate Y. When written, e.g. in formal invitations, the enlisted man's name is written as "Serviceman's name, USN/USMC/USA/USAF/USCG", without one's rank preceding their name, unlike commissioned officers.
- Retired military personnel may continue to be addressed by their rank at the time of their retirement. Those who held 'brevet' ranks higher than their permanent rank also held this honor; though all such individuals have now perished, this usage is often seen in historical or fictional sources placed in the 1865–1900 period.
Former styles
For the styles of address to government officials in Imperial Russia, see Table of Ranks.
The names of some offices are also titles, which are retained by the office holder for life. For example, holders of titles of which there are many at the same time, such as ambassadors, senators, judges, and military officers who retire retain use of their hierarchical honorific for life. Holders of titles of which there is only one office holder at a time such as president, chief justice or speaker revert to their previous honorific when they leave office out of deference to the current office holder.
Other parallel symbols
Styles were often among the range of symbols that surrounded figures of high office. Everything from the manner of address to the behaviour of a person on meeting that personage was surrounded by traditional symbols. Monarchs were to be bowed to by men and curtsied to by women. Senior clergy, particularly in the Roman Catholic Church, were to have their rings kissed by lay persons while they were on bended knee, while cardinals in an act of homage at the papal coronation were meant to kiss the feet of the Supreme Pontiff, the Pope.Many of these traditions have lapsed or been partially abandoned. At his inauguration as pope in 1978, Pope John Paul II himself kissed cardinals on the cheeks, rather than follow the traditional method of homage of having his feet kissed.
Similarly, styles, though still used, are used less often. The former President of Ireland, Mary McAleese, was usually referred to as President Mary McAleese, not President McAleese, as had been the form used for the first six presidents, from President Hyde to President Hillery. Tony Blair asked initially to be called Tony. First names, or even nicknames, are often widely used among politicians in the US, even in formal situations. One notable exception involves judges: a judge of any court is almost invariably addressed as "Your Honor" while presiding over his or her court, and often at other times as well. This style has been removed in the Republic of Ireland, where judges are addressed only as "Judge".
However, styles are still widely used in formal documents and correspondence between heads of state, such as in a letter of credence accrediting an ambassador from one head of state to another.