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Originally posted by Graham View PostLet's face it, most Americans couldn't find America on a map.
Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac View PostWhy would an American be able to place Wales or Scotland, anyway?
See, I don't expect Americans to correctly label a blank map of Europe, but I think knowing Italy=south, Sweden=north, Germany=central, Hungary= east central is important, and if you know those things, then you can find those countries on a correctly labeled map.
In terms of names, I'm with Rivkah. Whatever happened to good old English names such as: Johnny, Jack, Jimmy, Bobby, Alf, Stan, Billy, Tommy? They seem a nice enough couple but I'm not really interested in their lives or the monarchy, but for the sake of sanity and a restoration of Englishness, let's have: John.These days people are named Sky - that's not a name, it's part of our environment!
I thought this one kindergarten teacher I knew would start crying when she told me about her class one year (about 15 years ago). She had a Britanny, Britony, Britni, Bretagne (those parents were my favorite), and also a Brianna, just in the morning class. In the afternoon, she had another Brianna, but pronounced differently from the one in the morning, a Breyona, a Britney, another Brittany, and just for fun, a Bretta. Also, in one of the classes, there was a boy named Bryon. Not a typo for Byron. (Yes, I am sure I got all those right, because I asked her to email them to me, and I saved the file). She had to remember all the spellings and pronunciations, and here is the hard part: remember which one went with which child. If she spelled a kid's name wrong, or called one by the wrong named, the parents got extremely irate, in spite of the fact that anyone who names a kid "Breyona," really shouldn't have high expectations for other people.
When I complain about this, there's always someone who points out that fixed spelling of words is a new phenomenon, and Shakespeare didn't have a fixed spelling for his name. I say, fine, then I can spell Brianna anyway that strikes my ear as correct, and the parents can shut up about it. Her birth certificate may say "Bhreeyonuh," but hey, Shakespeare didn't have a fixed spelling. Maybe tomorrow, I'll spell her name with four Ns and a silent Q.
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Originally posted by Beowulf View PostOh, wow. It's a boy! Congratulations, England!
I'm going on record to say I think his name will be George. Just have a feeling.
Originally posted by Ginger View PostI was thinking earlier that they ought to name him George
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Advice on baby names from the website Baby's Named a Bad, Bad Thing. It's the "Cake Wrecks" of 21st century children's names.
Q: What should I name my kids?
A: I can’t give you the perfect name. I’m much better at cursing the darkness, anyway. But here are a few tips I’ve gleaned from digging around bulletin boards, books, and the tons of e-mails I get from readers:
1) Generally avoid nouns. You’re asking for trouble.
2) Do a Google search for your name ideas. If all you get are porn sites, white supremacist groups and pictures of My Little Ponies – it’s a bad name.
3) Look at lists of the most popular baby names for the last three years. Steer clear of the top 10, and definitely steer clear of any names that suddenly jump from #150 to #25.
4) No celebrity names. Your kids will immediately hate this celebrity, and be horribly embarrassed forever.
5) If you like a common name, but don’t like how it’s spelled, tough. Either use the usual spelling, or find a new name. Andrywe is NOT a name. If people can’t get it right on the second try, it’s not worth the hassle.
6) Most Americans are assimilated cultural mutts, without much connection to their ancestry. If you want to reconnect with your heritage, go to the library. Do not name your kid Bronwyn and think you are now in touch with your 1/16 Welsh side.
7) A stupid sounding name is still a stupid sounding name even if its meaning is “beloved queen” or something else nice.
8) Do not name your kid with elementary school bullies in mind. If it isn’t incredibly obvious (Gaylord, Fartoff), they’re going to get that little bit teased like the rest of us were, and there’s nothing you can do about it.
9) Try these on for size: “Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I’d like to introduce you to the new CEO of MultiGlobal Corp., [blank blank]” or “Also on the presidential panel is MIT’s chief biochemical researcher, Dr. [blank blank].
10) Assuming your child will live to age 70, s/he will spend 16% of their life as a child, 10% of their life as teenagers and 14% as senior citizens. The remaining 60% of their lives they will be adults. Plan accordingly.
2) & 10) especially important. During the 1990s, I knew of a corporate attorney, born in the early 1960s, with the unfortunate name of Buffy Cohen. Obviously, her parents didn't think past tying ribbons in her curls, to what "Buffy Cohen, esq.," or "The Honorable Buffy Cohen," or "Governor Buffy Cohen," would look like. Since she wasn't "B. <dignified name> Cohen," they probably stuck with an equally cute middle name.
Worse, the character Anissa Jones played had a backstory: "Buffy" was a nickname-- her real name was Elizabeth.
Worser: Anissa Jones went on to die of an infamous drug overdose at age 18. The ME said it was the most drugs he'd ever seen anyone manage to get into their body without passing out first.
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Originally posted by Graham View PostLet's face it, most Americans couldn't find America on a map.
GLast edited by Abby Normal; 07-25-2013, 12:04 AM."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostOf course we can. It's just south of Fukyoudooshbag!
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I know, old thread, but reading this I had to ask-
When did the term "GREAT Britain" come into usage? Is the adjective in reference to the British Isles in general, or was there a "Lesser Britain" at some point that has "sunk beneath the waves"? (I'm being metaphorical here.) Maybe Ireland in a more chilly political climate (17th Century?)?
- CFL
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Originally posted by C. F. Leon View PostI know, old thread, but reading this I had to ask-
When did the term "GREAT Britain" come into usage? Is the adjective in reference to the British Isles in general, or was there a "Lesser Britain" at some point that has "sunk beneath the waves"? (I'm being metaphorical here.) Maybe Ireland in a more chilly political climate (17th Century?)?
- CFL
England.
England and Scotland = Britain
Britain and Wales = Great Britain
Great Britain and Northern Ireland = United Kingdom.
(I may and Wales and Scotland the wrong way around)G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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The term "Great Britain" dates back to mediaeval times, to distinguish the island of Britain (England, Scotland and Wales) from the Kingdom of Brittany in France: "Grande Bretagne" vs "Bretagne".Kind regards, Sam Flynn
"Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)
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