Sorry! A thousand pardons, oh shiny, lethal one!
Tara ,'First Date'
Natter 32 Flavors and Then Some
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I do not fear the ita.
A continent helps. Also, she'd pity my weaklingness.
Good bath.
Good night.
I got weighed today, and it was Not Pretty. I should be thinking gym. Instead, I just ate Wise Onion Rings.
And you people talking about working on the weekend and UPS remind me that I never got an overnight package I was expecting. Huh. I guess I won't work this weekend?
There was something else I meant to comment on, I'm sure, but I seem to be kind of drunk.
Oh yeah. That's what it was: People's names got screwy on their way here, between "making it easier," converting from different alphabets, and etc. Also, "Ellis Island" is shorthand for US immigration. I'm not that upset with people who say their family name changed "at Ellis Island," even if they're wrong.
FYI.
Hee, Jesse.
( I lied.)
My grandmother and her parents really did go through Ellis. (I'm going there next time I visit you.) My grandfather as well, but I don't know when and he had an incredibly common name. And apparently, it was made up in Sweden, not here.
Ellis Island is in our hearts, and we carry it with us wherever we go.
Unless we're Native American. Or a few other exceptions....
As far as I know, none of my family went through Ellis (either too soon or too late), and there are a lot of original-country names still, as far as I can tell.
Be glad. I got called down to the office so many times when it wasn't me but another Sara Lastname. And the thing is? Lastname is NOT common where I grew up. Garcia, sure. Lastname? No.
I'll bet half of Sweden has Lastname. It was popular when they had to go from the whole Daddottier/son to one patrymn/that word.
I think it actually was someone on Ellis Island that shortened my Hungarian grandfather's name from Schmelzer to Smeller. My mother made him change it to Sheller before she would marry him. I'm not exactly sure of the correct spelling of the original name, but my father's entire family are Smellers and I'm pretty sure it wasn't their idea.
I've never run across anyone with my last name in person, but there are a bunch of them on the internet. I actually found a guy with my first and last names who was born in the late 1800s, and married in the early 1900s. Scary how many old records are online.