Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. I had a family with four kids whose names were all cities- Alexandria, Brooklyn, London and I forget the last one. I told the first one that I liked her name and that’s I used to live in Alexandria in VA. She said we are all named after where we were “made.” ? That was info I wish I didn’t know.
Anonymous wrote:Names fascinate me. Two generations ago, it was not at all uncommon for Catholic families to name each daughter Mary with a different (saint's) name as a middle. Only one daughter (eldest) would go by Mary and her sisters would usually only use their middle names. Great example; the Fisher Quints, born in South Dakota.
The quints, four girls and a boy, arrived on Sept. 14, 1963 — just days after the X-ray — and were named Mary Ann, Mary Catherine, Mary Margaret, Mary Magdalene and James Andrew.Feb 2, 2015
Anonymous wrote:Names fascinate me. Two generations ago, it was not at all uncommon for Catholic families to name each daughter Mary with a different (saint's) name as a middle. Only one daughter (eldest) would go by Mary and her sisters would usually only use their middle names. Great example; the Fisher Quints, born in South Dakota.
The quints, four girls and a boy, arrived on Sept. 14, 1963 — just days after the X-ray — and were named Mary Ann, Mary Catherine, Mary Margaret, Mary Magdalene and James Andrew.Feb 2, 2015
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD 4 got invited to a birthday of a friend from preschool who is a twin. The other twin is not in her class, so I asked my DD what her name was and she said Anna(not using exact names) The twin in her class is named Anna, so I just knew she was getting confused, but she instead they both were named Anna. Sure enough one was named AnnaClaire and the other AnnaJane. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a parent give their kids basically the same name.
I’m a teacher. There’s nothing about names that can surprise me anymore.
Anonymous wrote:My guess is they assumed people would use the full compound name for each twin, and didn't realize that people would just use the first name for each.
So they thought that they had two different names - Mary Catherine and Mary Jane. But that's not how it worked out in reality.
Anonymous wrote:Allow me to introduce you to George Foreman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD 4 got invited to a birthday of a friend from preschool who is a twin. The other twin is not in her class, so I asked my DD what her name was and she said Anna(not using exact names) The twin in her class is named Anna, so I just knew she was getting confused, but she instead they both were named Anna. Sure enough one was named AnnaClaire and the other AnnaJane. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a parent give their kids basically the same name.
DP sometimes it is cultural. I knew a girl from Mexico and she said all her sisters were named Maria and then a different middle name. They were all called by their middle name. I also knew someone who named her two sons Sean and Ian which is basically the same name too. ( John in Irish and Scottish)
In Spanish the Maria names all have their own nicknames. Maria Teresa = Maite. Maria del Prado = Pradito.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD 4 got invited to a birthday of a friend from preschool who is a twin. The other twin is not in her class, so I asked my DD what her name was and she said Anna(not using exact names) The twin in her class is named Anna, so I just knew she was getting confused, but she instead they both were named Anna. Sure enough one was named AnnaClaire and the other AnnaJane. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a parent give their kids basically the same name.
DP sometimes it is cultural. I knew a girl from Mexico and she said all her sisters were named Maria and then a different middle name. They were all called by their middle name. I also knew someone who named her two sons Sean and Ian which is basically the same name too. ( John in Irish and Scottish)