Grandpa and Grandma for me (although maternal grandmother was Gramma because that's how she spelled it, not how I said it).
Oh, Father's Day--I have to get stuff! I'm debating if I want to splurge and pick him up some Omaha Steaks, which he would love.
Anybody else call their moms Momma?
My sons call their moms "Mom" and "Momma" to differentiate them....
ION, the Incredible Dehydrated Cat: [link]
my great grandmother was Treasure to everyone.
my Grandma is GG to her now 8 great grandchildren.
(although maternal grandmother was Gramma because that's how she spelled it, not how I said it).
When we first started writing on cards we went with the "Gramma/Grampa" spellings because of pronounciation even though we knew "Grandma/Grandpa" were more correct.
We are from New Jersey, after all. We need to conserve the letter "D" whenever possible... we're saving them up for all those eliminated "T"s.
I called my grandparents Dod and George and Sam and Barbara. We wuz free-thinkin' hippies.
My kids have Grandma Debbie and Grampy Don, Grandma and Grandpa (lastname), and Grandpa Toby and Grandma Terry.
ETA: I am eating mashed potatoes with numb lips. They gave me Hydrocodone! I could become an addict, dude!
my Grandma is GG to her now 8 great grandchildren.
My grandmom was GG to her greats who were around while she was alive too!
Both sets of grandparents were Grandmom & Grandad to us sometimes with the last name appended if there would be confusion. My parents are Granny & Grandad.
I had no Grandfathers, and called my Grandmothers Honey (she wasn't the Grandma type) and Nanny Gay (Gay = her last name). My parents are Granny and Papa. My mom is far too young (and looks younger than she is) to be Granny, but that's what she wanted. MiL will be called Grandma.
Grandma and Grandpa on one side, Poppa and Nana on the other. I have no idea what my putative children would call my mother.
I think my mother would want to be Mémère, like her mother before her, but like her father, Pepere or whatever the equivalent is would NOT work for my father, so who knows.