Title
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- For other uses of title, refer to Title (disambiguation).
A title is a prefix or suffix added to a person's name to signify either veneration, an official position or a professional or academic qualification.
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Titles of veneration
- Adept
- Bwana
- Caudillo
- Chief
- Daimyo
- Elder
- Esquire
- Generalissimo
- Guru
- Leader
- Mahatma
- Master
- Samurai
- Shogun
- Sir
- Swami
- Śrī
Official titles
Note: Some official titles are carried strictly for the term of the office, while others are customarily retained after the office is retired.
Ruling
- Alderman
- Ban
- Baron
- Baroness
- Baronet
- Bey
- Black Rod
- Caliph
- Chevalier
- Commissioner
- Councillor
- Count
- Count palatine
- Countess
- Dictator
- Duchess
- Duke
- Earl
- Elector
- Emir
- Emperor
- Empress
- Gauleiter
- General Secretary
- Governor
- Governor-General
- Graf
- Grand duchess
- Grand duke
- High Commissioner
- His/Her Honor
- Jarl
- Khan
- Knez, Kniaz
- Majesty
- Knight
- Landgrave
- Lord
- Maharadja
- Marchioness
- Marquis
- Marquise
- Mayor
- Minister
- MEP
- MP
- MPP
- Nawab
- People's Commissar
- Prebendary
- Premier
- President
- Prime Minister
- Rajah
- Rangatira
- Regent
- Secretary General
- Seigneur
- Senator
- Shah
- Sheriff
- Speaker
- Steward
- Sultan
- Sultana
- Surgeon General
- Tribune
- Tsar
- Tsarevna
- Tyrant
- Vicereine
- Viceroy
- Viscount
Clerical
- Archbishop
- Archdeacon
- Bishop
- Deacon
- Deaconess
- Metropolitan
- Patriarch
- Pontiff
- Pope
- Presbyter
- Priest
- Priestess
- Rabbi
- Reverend
Professional and academic titles
- Advocate
- Bailiff
- Barrister
- Doctor
- Eur Ing
- Graduate
- Judge
- Lecturer
- MBA
- M.D.
- Notary
- Officer
- Professor
- Ph.D.
- Queen's Counsel
- Reader
Social titles
Titles conventionally appended to persons' names in social life. Some professional titles are used in social life, such as Rev.; others usually are not (Dr., for example, is not always used in the US in the case of a Ph.D. but is generally used for medical professionals; in other countries, for example the UK, it is considered somewhat inappropriate for non-academics to use Dr. solely on the strength of a medical degree).