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I grew up with Nana and Pap-Pap (Shout out to Pittsburghers here…I think Pap Pap is uniquely Pittsburgh). Some time during my childhood, Pap Pap became Pap or Pappa, written as Papa.
Long widowed grandma was Nannie. No confusion. Interesting to note that I’m one of 5 siblings with many cousins on both sides. Learned recently that our grandparent monikers were specific to my family of origin. The cousins (who lived further away and rarely saw the grandparents) called them Grandmother and Grandfather. I miss my grandparents. |
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My mom, stepmom, and MIL are all called different names, none of which is just grandma. One of them is a name that my niece said when she first started talking and couldn’t say grandma, so it’s baby talk. Cringe. The others are made up versions of grandma because I guess grandma sounds too old and not unique enough. Good grief. I am definitely just going to be “grandma.” I will be old and I don’t need to be unique.
Of course l, it is their choice and I respect it. And I’d never tell my kids that it bugs me. |
| GiGi pronounced as if she were French. Gets on my last nerve. |
That is the whole point of this website. Vent or start threads even if they’re trivial. God, people, you ruin everything by having to complain about what someone wants to talk about. |
My mom is also Gigi, but prounounced GG |
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I think nana is pretty traditional, OP, and I feel like it’s commonly used for mil’s? Like maternal GMA is grandma and mil is nana? This was fairly common growing up (I’m 40).
The cool grandma names are obnoxious, I’m with you there. My mil goes by Gigi and even has a shirt that says something like “Gigi - grandmother but so much cooler.” She’s the most uptight person I’ve ever met. My mother goes by a name appropriated from a culture of which she is not part - but whatever. We call them what they want and hope they love our kids and spend quality time with them. |
And some people don’t have hands, but, you are using yours to type this crap. |
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My MIL insisted on Nana and Poppop, which sounded really stupid to me because these names imply (to me) that the kids have a warm, caring relationship with their grandchildren.
My ILs are ogres, so hearing my teenaged boys call them Nana and Poppop is just ridiculous. Kids call them by their first names when ILs aren’t around. |
Hey!! Why is South Jersey getting such a bad rap? I’m proud of my hometown! 😁 My kids do grandmom and grandpop, because that’s what I grew up calling my grandparents. |
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Mem Mem = grandmother
Pep Pep = grandfather This is in PA |
+1 Mother from Millville, can confirm She, however. has styled herself "Zsa Zsa" based on her snarky love of the ZZ Gabor drama (husband, amputations, etc) |
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My DD couldn't pronounce "grandma" or "grannie" or anything with "Gr." My mom, a French teacher, decided on "Meme" (pronounced May-May--I can't make accents over the e's). Easy to say, makes my mom happy. Dad couldn't care less--he's pop-pop. Because it's easy to say.
For free babysitting, I don't care if my kids call them Bonnie and Clyde, as long as the grandparents are happy. |
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Yes. I hate it.
Grandmama and Granddaddy. |
bingo. |
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I let them pick whatever they wanted to be called. Why not? That is their choice and now as a young adult, DS uses their first names and all is well.
Growing up, we were the far away out of state grandkids and had the generic Grandpa [last name] and Grandma [last name] for each. Thankfully that did not carry on. |