Teachers' Names

<p>Do you call your teachers by their first names? </p>

<p>If not, how do you address your teachers? </p>

<p>Mr/Ms/Mrs?</p>

<p>Sir/Madam?</p>

<p>Last name only? </p>

<p>Middle name? </p>

<p>Pet name? (e.g. “boo”)</p>

<p>I only call my teachers by thie first name if I have a really, really, really, really close relationship with them. But with any other teacher, I say Mrs/Ms/Mr…whatever.</p>

<p>My band teacher is just their last name but all of my others are Mrs/Mr/Ms. I probably won’t even use their names on most days though. So it isn’t something that is often an issue (when someone says who do you have for maths I say ‘Smith’ but if I’m calling for the teacher I’d say ‘Mr.Smith’)</p>

<p>Last year, I called my science teacher by his last name, everyone did. Other than that, Mr./Mrs./Miss _________(Fill in with name).</p>

<p>Last name only usually :)</p>

<p>We get reprimanded for calling one of our teachers without using Mr. in front of it. We just laugh. Though when talking about him, we always use just the last name. I’ve never called a teacher by their first name.</p>

<p>But I have a habit of saying “Hey Teacher-person” to call my teachers’ attention…</p>

<p>For close teachers, I just say their last name without a Mr,Mrs,etc. The rest are Mr/Ms and then last name. I’ve never called a teacher by their first name!</p>

<p>I’m exactly the same as Pandamic…</p>

<p>Always Mr or Mrs _____ when directly talking to that teacher. I feel weird if I don’t. When I know him/her well, I occasionally use a shortened version of their last name or a nickname. But when I’m mentioning a teacher to another teacher, I sometimes only use the last name.</p>

<p>When talking about teachers I only use the last name. Ill sometimes do that talking to them unless they’re unfriendly or have specified to use mr or mrs before the name. Also at my school the word Mrs does not exist in our vocab. For women it’s always Ms.</p>

<p>I call two of my teachers by their middle names but otherwise I just say mrs/mr</p>

<p>Hm.</p>

<p>Captain and Chief (in JROTC) are just Captain and Chief.
I call my Spanish Cinema teacher Senor.
I’ve never-not called an English teacher by just their last name (no Mr./Mrs. attached).
My pre-calc teacher is just Mr. Last Name.
My government teacher got married this summer but I had her before, so I try to use her new name but sometimes I use her old last name.
And we call my gender studies teacher whatever we want, except by just her first name. So I call her by her two last names (she also got married), and like 4 other nicknames. She was horrified to learn earlier today that outside of class we call her by just her first name and my classmates have multiple Twitter hashtags to talk about her and the funny/quotable things she says.</p>

<h1>stuffmamasays</h1>

<p>“yo hoover”</p>

<p>or “that boy smith be teachin it out”</p>

<p>or “yo tiernau getcha a… ova here”</p>

<p>Lol, I address my teachers by mr./ms.- ln</p>

<p>^ interesting</p>

<p>10char</p>

<p>Well For me I don’t call any teacher by first name. However there are some teachers who prefer to be called a certain way. One teacher at my school is called “goku” because of his “yellow” hair (don’t be fooled he look nothing like the guy). My english teacher want every one to call her Mrs. Sick (because her full last name is hard for people to say). </p>

<p>However I calls all female teachers “Ms. (last name)” for no real reason at despite whether they are married or not. I call some teachers by there last name only but it rare.</p>

<p>Just last names. No mr/mrs/ms</p>

<p>I just say Miss or Mister without saying their last names.</p>

<p>Have a nice day</p>

<p>I used to always call my old LA teacher Mr. Whale, because his name was Mr. Orcutt, which oddly reminded me of “orca” whales.
Not that he was…particularly rotund or anything.</p>

<p>When I’m talking to them always with Mr/Mrs./Sra. then their last name
But if I don’t respect them I call them by their first name behind their back.</p>

<p>I generally don’t have to refer to them as anything. When I talk to them directly I don’t say a name. When I think of them in my head, I think Mr./Ms./Mrs. So-and-So.</p>