in the USSR, a designation established and conferred by competent organizations, institutions, enterprises, or kolkhozes, attesting to official recognition of the services of individuals or groups or to occupational, official, scientific, or other qualifications. The procedure for establishing titles and for conferring or withdrawing them, as well as the rights and obligations associated with different titles, are defined by legislative and other normative acts. Titles may be honorary, military, scientific, special, personal, occupational, sport, or academic. They may be conferred on the winners of prizes and competitions, or they may be awarded on the basis of socialist emulation, for example, to the best worker in a given occupation or to the best young expert. Titles established for investigative workers of agencies of the procuracy are called grade ranks, and titles for diplomatic workers of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the USSR and of embassies and missions abroad are called diplomatic ranks.
(1) An honorary appellation (for example, “count” or “duke”) that may be hereditary or may be conferred on a given individual as the mark of a particular, privileged position. A required form of address corresponds to each title (for example, “your eminence” or “your highness”). Titles were extensively used under the feudal estate system, and they have been retained in some bourgeois countries, such as Great Britain, until today. In Russia, titles were abolished after the October Revolution of 1917.
(2) In bourgeois law, the instrument that is evidence of a right—for example, a title or deed of purchase, sale, conveyance, or exchange.
(3) In an obsolete meaning, a certificate or diploma granted upon completion of a program of studies at an educational institution.
(4) See
(5) In printing, the same as “title page.”