+1 |
My Hispanic in-laws are fairly well off and call our daughter Mami (along with a string of other nicknames), so it's not exclusive to the poors. You do hear it more often, though. I would say it's by far more ethnic than socioeconomic. No poor white family in Kentucky calls their little son Papa or Daddy. |
I've heard poor whites call their kids mama |
What I am suggesting is that perhaps you or your family grew up in a working class environment. There is nothing wrong with this, I did as well and worked my way up from poverty. I rarely hear it from friends and associates that grew up wealthy |
Sorry that doesn't ring true. But e for effort for trying to clean it up. Your black and latino friends don't represent the community. Hopefully you aren't representative of the formerly "working class" community either. |
+1 I also say ma'am. and I say mister or sir to my 3 yr old DS. lol |
Yup, my daughter is "Baby Lady" or "Little Lady." |
Yes, sometimes I also call my DD, "Ma'am." Like, "Let's get a move on, ma'am." |
BS. I'm of west indian descent from an upper class family. We use these terms as well as a term of affection. |
My mom and I used to play back and forth. I'd call her Madam and she'd call me madamoiselle. (27 now we still do it. lol) |
Its a term of endearment and in mine case it was used for me when I was a little girl because I was a sassy little thing! People used to say to me:
"come on lil mama" "ok then lil mama" "lets go mama" |
What is this board's fascination lately with what other cultures are doing? (and often with a condescending/judgemental tone attached to the question)
Does anyone care if/why a WASP calls their son Chip or Skip? |
OP - here. Wow...I had no idea the turn this thread would take! I honestly had no idea this is a cultural issue since it was certainly not evident from the people I observed using this term!
I apologize if I offended anyone by using the term odd to describe mothers calling their daughters "mama". |
I'm a new poster and I want to know WHY Hispanics/south Americans call their children the equivalent of "mother" and "father" - I would never think of calling my kids mother or father and I'm curious what it means - is it like "little lady" or is it kind if referring to the child's parent - like you're-just-like-your-mama so we're going to call you mama? |
I am African. In my country, we also call little girls "mama" and little boys "papa". It has nothing to do with wealth. It is done pretty much across all layers of society.
My friends from other African countries have the same habit. I am kind of tickled that South Americans share it. |