MrsPete said:
Answer from an English teacher:
It depends upon what the woman to whom you're addressing the letter prefers. Some women prefer the ambiguous Ms, which clouds their marital status, while others -- like me --find it slightly insulting because it belittles their husbands by pretending they don't exist. I can understand why single women (especially those who live alone) prefer to remain a little mysterious about their marital status for safety reasons.
So which is CORRECT? Neither is correct 100% of the time. It is grammatically correct -- and polite -- to use the title that each individual woman prefers.
Since we're discussing grammar, "Ms" IS NOT written with a period after it because it's not an abbreviation for anything. Mrs. is an abbreviation for Missus, and Mr. is an abbreviation for Mister. Ms is not short for anything. Miss is also written without a period because -- again -- it is not an abbreviation.
By the way, I didn't like one thing in that Emily Post website: it says that if a woman "outranks" her husband (for example, if she is a doctor while he is "only" a Mr.) her name should be listed first on the envelope. That sounds very insulting. The order of names on an envelope is a tradition, not a hierarchy of importance! This implies that all other women are "lesser than" their husbands automatically. By this logic, a husband who's unemployed should be automatically knocked down to second-class status. I think it's an attempt by "new ettiquette" to be "modern" but it's missing the mark badly.
I'm so tired of people quoting Emily Post as proof of anything being correct. Ug.
If the woman goes by "Ms," then she has to be a seperate line. You aren't Ms. John Doe, you are Ms. Jane Doe (or Ms. Jane Smith, if you didn't change names.) "Mrs. John Doe," is the wife of John Doe. Ms. doesn't mean anything, except that she's a woman.
I'm not against the use of Ms. I like it, and that's the truth. If everyone wanted to switch it around so that girls dropped Miss at the time boys dropped Master, and all women had one title, like all men do, I'd be all for it.
And a woman who is a doctor is still the wife of her husband, "Mr. and Mrs. John Doe" is still appropriate.
In fact, many, MANY people who have the title "Dr." (medical or other) do not use that title socially. Some even frown on it. So, you gotta find out if that person uses it or not. It may mean something somewhere else, but makes no difference on an envelope, or in a social setting (unless a bride passes out and someone cries, "Is there a doctor in the house?")
Address the woman however she wants to be addressed.
As for the MIL, or anyone else who always wants to point out your errors, I have found that a pleasant, "Really? Is that right? I didn't know that!" makes them happy...and you haven't agreed or disagreed. This also works well when you were wrong, so people never can tell if you're happily corrected or blowing them off.
