In a task, one of the contestants had to pretend to be a psychologist or an agony aunt (or uncle in this case) and a large sign saying "Dr. Callum" appeared on screen. And this, I'm afraid, is my little gripe. I hate the use of stops after Mr, Mrs, Dr and such titular abbreviations—so much so that my fingers itched to reach for the Tippex and apply a dollop to the TV screen.
I've grown used to seeing its use by our dear American friends (and have tried in vain to educate them), but I haven't seen this in British English in very many years (until yesterday).
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I only became aware that the stop (or should I say period for our friends over the pond) is used in this way in American English when I found my first American publisher and little dots appeared all over my very first manuscript.
"No, no, no," I said. "This is quite wrong."
"It's our house style," she explained.
"It's my pet hate—it looks so old-fashioned and wrong. Please don't do it to me."
"We'll compromise, just this once," she said. Lovely lady.
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Does it matter to you? Do you place full stops after abbreviations? And does anyone know if 'Big Brother' has an American working on its production team this year?