| We say Dada, but yeah just Dada and not your Dada. (I have toddlers and we love how they say dada so we stuck with that) |
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Both. When speaking to my kids “your” isn’t required. There is only one Dad in our house, and obviously he’s their dad.
In that case it becomes a proper noun, like a first name. I wouldn’t say go ask Brother, because brother is not a proper noun. |
| Either "Ask Dad" or "Ask your father". But not "Ask your dad." |
Yes to this. The only person who should drop the "My" when referring to mom or dad are my siblings. Even with my SIL I'll say "my mom" or "your mom". |
I wouldn't use it that way, but people do use it that way, or used to. I had a relative-in-law whose family referred to her as Sister or Sis (she was the oldest girl), and her brother (the oldest boy) was Brother or Buddy. |
In Spanish I say "My Mom" even when talking to my own siblings. I don't know if it's a language thing, I welcome other native speakers to chime in and I wonder if it varies by country. We are from southern Mexico. |
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I usually say Dad because as far as my kids are concerned that’s his name. DH occasionally refers to me as “your mom” but only when he’s emphasizing the relationship — like, “you do NOT hit your mother!” ahem two year old.
I live for the day my oldest will get why it’s funny when I make a “yo mama” joke. |
Ha! Yes, that's my pet peeve too. My family is Southern Baptist and they all do this! "Take this plate to dad, please" "Sure. Yours or mine?" "Yours and see if mine needs anything else." |
Same here. When talking to my kids, I use "Dad" like I'd use a first name. "Please give this book to Dad" is the equivalent of "Please give this book to Mary." If i'm talking about my own father to another person, I say "my dad." |
| Your dad. Not divorced. My parents referred to the parent by first name. Go ask Debbie etc.. |
Fascinating. These things bug me, too. When my alcoholic dad would start saying, “your mother,” I knew the shit was about to hit the fan. Somehow hearing someone else’s female parent as Mother seems creepy. “Mother always liked to keep a clean kitchen.” I also find it odd when my MIL refers to my mother as “Lois” to me, in conversation. “Lois says you’ll be there for Thanksgiving.” Stranger, MIL only ever calls my only sibling my “sister” and never by her name. I always hear, “is your sister here?” And yes, MIL knows my sister’s name and I’m not a newlywed. |
Referring to the other parent by their first name is strange to me. It feels unnatural and formal. |
| Mostly just Dad. |
I only refer to my brother as my brother in conversation. I don’t know why, just do. |
| "Your mother" and "your father" |