ESQUIRE

I want my name to be BuddhaDog Esquire.

Do I need to be knighted, a lawyer, or wealthy (or all three)?

We don’t (IIRC) have knights in the States, but we have Esquires’…

So what is the deal? What does one do to become an ‘esquire’ and how do I do it?

IIRC, get a doctorate in law.

SDSTAFF Dianne on Esqire.

There’s no need to go to that trouble in England. I happen to have seen the inside of a few law schools myself, but never took any exams there. I haven’t been knighhted either, although sometimes ladies have described me as a gentleman :). Anyhow, I’ve certainly had letters addressed to me as Xxx Xxxxxx Esq… My British dictionary defines it as “Chiefly Brit. a title of respect, usually abbreviated Esq., placed after a man’s name.”

So you wouldn’t get your Hustler subscription renewal addressed that way, but a formal letter from your employer, a lawyer or the Inland (=Internal) Revenue would be.

If you really want people to think you’re fancy, why not do what Count Basie, Duke Ellington or King Vidor did?

Circa 1970 there was a woman lawyer named Carol Turoff who wrote a column for the old Cleveland Press. It had something to do with women’s legal issues, especially those entering the workforce. The column’s title was “The SEXolution.” Her byline always read “Carol Turoff, Esquire.”

She wrote it that way on purpose to be provocative, knowing that a woman signing herself “Esquire” would look shocking back in those early days of Women’s Lib. Nowadays no one would pay it any mind.

Jomo I have lived in Akron, Ohio since 1971. I have had quite a bit of dealing with lawyers in that period of time, due to my profession.

Not to take away from your probably apt comments but a small percentage of (male)lawyers with whom I dealt would use the Esquire ending. They were, in my opinion and memory, usually small-timers who wanted to make themselves seem more important. That, of course, was my opinion. I can’t back it up with facts.