A Sir Phillip Con Amore

Sir is a formal honorific address in English for men, derived from Sire in the High Middle Ages. Both are derived from the old French " Sieur " (Lord), brought to England by the French-speaking Normans, and which now exists in French only as part of "Monsieur" lit. 'my lord'.

The meaning of SIR is a man entitled to be addressed as sir —used as a title before the given name of a knight or baronet and formerly sometimes before the given name of a priest.

SIR definition: a respectful or formal term of address used to a man. See examples of sir used in a sentence.

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People sometimes say sir as a very formal and polite way of addressing a man whose name they do not know or a man of superior rank. For example, a shop assistant might address a male customer as sir.

Sir is used at the beginning of a formal letter to a man you do not know: Dear Sir

  1. a polite form of address (spoken or written) to a man. Excuse me, sir!; He started his letter `Dear Sirs, ...'.

From Middle English sir, unstressed form of sire, borrowed from Old French sire (“master, sir, lord”), from Latin senior (“ older, elder ”), from senex (“old”).

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“At ease, lieutenant.” “Yes sir, captain.” Sir, I don't think I was speeding. Sir, can you help me with this math problem? Dinner is ready, sir.

Use the word sir as a formal title for a man. People often use sir to respectfully or politely address someone they don't know well. When you're saying hello to a man who's been knighted by the Queen of England, you should call him sir — it's the official way to address a knight.

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