Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have trouble pronouncing hard to pronounce name or spell them. I had people who work for and with me no clue how to say or spell their name.
People should have a work name one guy at work has like a 40 letter name. Something like sdullalllahhh muddalllllahh.
Or you could try. If you can pronounce Alexander and Elizabeth, you can do long names.
Liz and Alex. I would never spell or say their full name. I like one syllable first and last names. Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Bob Hope, Will Smith etc.
How disrespectful is that? I know a Jennifer who is Jennifer, not Jen. Who the hell are you to decide what they should be called?
Anonymous wrote:It comes up frequently that people mispronounce my name (if I haven’t been given the chance to introduce myself first). I don’t want to cut them off mid-sentence but I also don’t want the mispronunciation to linger. It’s especially awkward during meetings with multiple people.
How do I navigate this? Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Best is when someone has a short-cut for how to remember. ""it with rhymes with " ..."".
Generally though, it is a problem of uniqueness. You have decided to keep a unique name, live with it. You could have changed it. It's not their fault. Not everyone else's fault. Not entirely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have trouble pronouncing hard to pronounce name or spell them. I had people who work for and with me no clue how to say or spell their name.
People should have a work name one guy at work has like a 40 letter name. Something like sdullalllahhh muddalllllahh.
Or you could try. If you can pronounce Alexander and Elizabeth, you can do long names.
Liz and Alex. I would never spell or say their full name. I like one syllable first and last names. Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Bob Hope, Will Smith etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have trouble pronouncing hard to pronounce name or spell them. I had people who work for and with me no clue how to say or spell their name.
People should have a work name one guy at work has like a 40 letter name. Something like sdullalllahhh muddalllllahh.
Or you could try. If you can pronounce Alexander and Elizabeth, you can do long names.
Liz and Alex. I would never spell or say their full name. I like one syllable first and last names. Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Bob Hope, Will Smith etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have trouble pronouncing hard to pronounce name or spell them. I had people who work for and with me no clue how to say or spell their name.
People should have a work name one guy at work has like a 40 letter name. Something like sdullalllahhh muddalllllahh.
I have trouble respecting people like you. How little IQ and EQ do you have to have to not be able to take 3 minutes to learn to string some syllables together so you can properly address the fellow human beings around you?
There is ZERO excuse for misspelling a name. It’s ridiculous how often people do this when 99% of the time, the correct spelling is abundantly clear from the person’s email address or signature block (not to mention the staff directory that you can’t bother to look at).
Because I have trouble with it. When I do presentations I remove all big words as I can’t pronounce or remember them. I also can’t remember regular names very well. I don’t know or remember 95 percent of people’s names.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have trouble pronouncing hard to pronounce name or spell them. I had people who work for and with me no clue how to say or spell their name.
People should have a work name one guy at work has like a 40 letter name. Something like sdullalllahhh muddalllllahh.
Or you could try. If you can pronounce Alexander and Elizabeth, you can do long names.
Liz and Alex. I would never spell or say their full name. I like one syllable first and last names. Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, Bob Hope, Will Smith etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have trouble pronouncing hard to pronounce name or spell them. I had people who work for and with me no clue how to say or spell their name.
People should have a work name one guy at work has like a 40 letter name. Something like sdullalllahhh muddalllllahh.
I have trouble respecting people like you. How little IQ and EQ do you have to have to not be able to take 3 minutes to learn to string some syllables together so you can properly address the fellow human beings around you?
There is ZERO excuse for misspelling a name. It’s ridiculous how often people do this when 99% of the time, the correct spelling is abundantly clear from the person’s email address or signature block (not to mention the staff directory that you can’t bother to look at).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have trouble pronouncing hard to pronounce name or spell them. I had people who work for and with me no clue how to say or spell their name.
People should have a work name one guy at work has like a 40 letter name. Something like sdullalllahhh muddalllllahh.
Or you could try. If you can pronounce Alexander and Elizabeth, you can do long names.