THIS! I love Michael but don't care for Mike (same with David and Dave) so I would never name my kid Michael or David. Strangely I don't mind when Daniel and Nicholas are shortened to Dan and Nick. Every Christopher I've ever met (and they are legion in our generation) goes by Chris. Same with Jeffrey and Jeff. |
| I know one Chiara (her family pronounces it key-AR-uh) and if they use a nickname (usually don't) it's Kia. I'm not sure why they don't spell it Chia, but they spell the nickname Kia. The girl is now 19 and in college, but we met when she was in middle school. |
...psst: this is why you shouldn't have named him Christopher. If you've lived in the US for a long time, you would know that our culture is crazy for nicknames. It's a way to show affection and intimacy. Everyone calls you Elizabeth but I'm your sister so I call you Lizzie, that kind of thing. |
They do assign nicknames? Not in my experience as a student, a long time ago. And not in my kids' experience, either, at least not from what they tell me. |
Man you are really dense aren't you? The teacher might be a dunce but in reality, it's Christopher's problem because he has to do it every day and that's annoying. Soooo that is why everyone is telling you not to choose a name that naturally shortens to a name you don't care for. |
I was known as "Jenn with two Ns" to distinguish me from Jennifer, Jenny, Jennie, and JeN. They do this. |
I rarely have to deal with large groups of children, but when I deal with large groups of adults, having too many people with long multi-syllabic names makes things difficult when you have a lot going on. Once syllable nicknames help when you spend a lot of time busy and giving out directions. So, while I may start with Nicholas, Katherine, Christopher and Alexender, after a while when in a rush, it may become Nick, Kate, Chris and Alex. When things slow down again, I will go back to the full names, but sometimes speed is of the essence. I run several big events weekly and it only happens once every couple of times, but it does happen. Sorry when it does, but I'm not about to slow down a very busy environment trying to get a lot of things processed in a short amount of time just to adhere to long names. I can see this happening with a teacher in a large classroom. I personally tell my kids who prefer their two-syllable name to the one-syllable nickname that if the person is very busy and going fast, to just ignore it, but if things are slower and there is more time to request that the teacher use the preferred name. My example is if they are busy yelling at a group to let it slide, but when they are in one-on-ones or small group settings to make the request. |
No, it's not the PP's fault that the PP's son's teacher insists on calling the PP's son a nickname the PP's son doesn't want to be called. I have a brother, raised in the US, whose name is the equivalent of Christopher. Somehow throughout most of his life, most people have managed to remember to call him [the equivalent of] Christopher, rather than [the equivalent of] Chris. |
NP. I think the PP is saying that you should spare your child having to do this if you possibly can. Whether it's wrong or right doesn't matter, it's reality that people do this in America. |
| I am Italian, and this is my favorite Italian name--but I really do think it would be butchered so went with a different name for my DD. I am not aware of any nicknames for it; I think you'd just have to resign yourself to constantly explaining how it is pronounced. |
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Right, similar to how people advice others to avoid unique spellings to spare your child having to spell their name for others all their lives. |
^ advise, not advice |
| HEERA - |