<Li> the last kind of esquires are those of knights of the bath; each knight appoints two to attend upon him at his installation and at coronations . </Li> <P> Oxford Dictionaries currently provides for the following definition of Esquire: </P> <Ul> <Li> British: A polite title appended to a man's name when no other title is used, typically in the address of a letter or other documents: J.C. Pearson Esquire . </Li> <Li> North American: A title appended to the surname of a lawyer (of either sex). </Li> <Li> Historical: <Ul> <Li> A young nobleman who, in training for knighthood, acted as an attendant to a knight . </Li> <Li> an officer in the service of a king or nobleman . </Li> <Li> a landed proprietor or country squire: the lord of the manor, Richard Bethell Esquire . </Li> </Ul> </Li> </Ul> <Li> British: A polite title appended to a man's name when no other title is used, typically in the address of a letter or other documents: J.C. Pearson Esquire . </Li>

When do you put esquire after a name