Over the last two years I've considered the possibility that JFK jr is alive.
Juan = John O = Onasis (his mother) Savin = the library that was dedicated to his father JFK, which he was involved with its dedication
He didn't even hide it.
Over the last two years I've considered the possibility that JFK jr is alive.
Juan = John O = Onasis (his mother) Savin = the library that was dedicated to his father JFK, which he was involved with its dedication
He didn't even hide it.
Good question.
So I looked it up and looks like you drop the Junior unless you want to keep it
Who is a Senior, a Junior or The Third? A man with the same name as his father uses “Jr.” after his name as long as his father is alive. His father may use the suffix “Sr.” for “senior.” The son may either drop the suffix after his father’s death or, if he prefers, retain it so that he won’t be confused with his late father. When a man is named after his father who is a “Jr.,” he is called “the third,” once written with either the numeric 3rd or the Roman numeral III, but now the latter is used almost exclusively. A man named after his grandfather, uncle, or cousin uses the suffix II, “the second.” In writing, a comma is used to separate the surname and the suffixes Jr. and Sr., though the trend is now toward dropping the comma. Junior, when spelled out, is written with a lower case j. No punctuation is used when a name has a numeral suffix: Robert Conner III The wife a man who uses a suffix, uses the same suffix after her name: Mrs. John M. Baxter, Jr.