Aimee/Amy/Ami/Amie
Natter 54: Right here, dammit.
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.
The most common one is "Dru."
Aimee, tell Joe he might want to pack some work gloves if he has a pair.
People generally write "Erica" which, no big. Except I just wrote the "k" myself. Do you not think I can spell my own name?
Aimee, tell Joe he might want to pack some work gloves if he has a pair.
He already packed them! Smart boy!
I've been here since 8:15. I think it is time to go home.
There'd better be hot water.
I got asked if my name was "Ha" last week. That doesn't happen as often as it used to--primarily because most of the time it's handwritten it's by me and lower-case and the "I" and the "t" aren't behaving all inappropriately towards each other. Most of the times when I'm asked my name by people who are going to handwrite I just give them my last name. Can't do that in the ER.
I think now, after 8 years of marriage, all of the relatives I'm in regular contact with have finally worked it out that my husband's name isn't Dillon and that our last name only has one L. Did they think we were spelling it wrong on our own wedding invitations and Christmas cards?
ETA and Annabel is already Annabelle, Annabell, Anabelle, etc. Not that this is a surprise to us--we knew we were violating our "only one standard spelling" rule when we chose her name.
I'm just not Jackie, and I don't want to be. Really, that is all I ask. And even that is too much for about half the people I meet.
Also, Hec is not Dave, and Matilda is too young to state any preferences one way or another but I myself have a screaming aversion to Mattie. If that's the nick she settles on I'm going to have to work shamefully hard on being Zen about it.
I had a phone bill addressed to "Giona" for a year. Most other misspellings happen because people start with a "J" and get confused.