are you for hire?
You couldn't afford me.
River ,'War Stories'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
are you for hire?
You couldn't afford me.
I am now finding that hyphenating is considered outre or weird most of the time.
It's a bitch to fit onto a personnel label. Consequently, I hate hyphenated names, and tend to mutter "I don't care about your love and commitment! Choose something shorter!"
But that's only when I'm making labels. Sometimes I do push for hiring Koreans though, simply on the basis of short surnames.
I didn't drop my middle name, I'm still legally FirstName MiddleName Last-LastName, but I don't include it in my signature.
What happens when two people who already have their parents' hyphenated names get married and want to combine names?
I like the idea of hyphenated or two last names in general, but I'd have to marry someone with a last name somewhere around three letters in order to make a name hyphenated with mine not be ridiculously long.
What happens when two people who already have their parents' hyphenated names get married and want to combine names?
See what I'm sayin'?
That's why ours works, Hil. My name is one syllable. It combines well.
not enough nick names was one of the reasons I didn't like my name. Brian... Bri... that's it. My brother had a TON. Richard. Richie. Rich. Dick. Ricardo. Helen. (that was his nick name in HS... more because of our last name, and there was 2 other Richards in his class).
Cancer-beating~ma to Karen, and to Suzi's assistant.
Ma~ma to Hil.
Congrats to meara on her new job and city.
I didn't drop my middle name, I'm still legally FirstName MiddleName Last-LastName, but I don't include it in my signature.
Shoot, I don't include all the letters in my signature - there's a first initial, a hump of a last initial, a wacky loop that stands in for four letters in the middle, and I don't even bother with the last letter any more. There's just not enough room on credit card slips, ya know?
I've always thought it would be nifty to create a society in which couples would take the same name, which would be a combination of their respective family names, thus creating a new family name. It would be totally up to the couple themselves to decide which letters from each name, whether to go with a portmanteau or anagram, or whatever.
What happens when two people who already have their parents' hyphenated names get married and want to combine names?
That's their problem. I'm likely to give my kids a big butt and too many last names. We all have our burdens...