Who's Opostrolier? Actually, the Herschel is Herschel Galileo--a lurking astronomy buff, I suppose.
I always think of your family when the name convo comes up, ita.
Jamaicans be crazy.
'Out Of Gas'
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.
Who's Opostrolier? Actually, the Herschel is Herschel Galileo--a lurking astronomy buff, I suppose.
I always think of your family when the name convo comes up, ita.
Jamaicans be crazy.
That you should be named Not!Prudent?
Ha!
The most stunning (to me) of my family names is Catherinus. I know it's a great-grandfather - I think my father's father's father.
Off to bed. Name day in Natter was a fun day to have off.
Herschel Opostrolier was one of the greatest jester in Jewish history. Not seriously asked, I always forget he is not that well known cause I grew up with him. Actually there are lots of Jews who never heard of him, so it was an unjustifiably obscure joke.
I mean, great-grandpa was Eber, and I can only guess if that's another phonetic spelling for something French.
Might be short for Eberhart/Eberhard/Eberhardt. I've also got a couple of guys named Trieber and one named Reber in my genealogy file.
The ones I boggle at are when titles get used as first names. Examples from my (extremely extended) family file: Admiral, Baron, Bishop, Colonel, Commodore, Earl, Judge, King, Lady, LeRoy, Major, Marquis, Marshal, Master, Princess, Queen, Royal, Duke, General, Major, Pope, Squire, Sid, Sargeant/Sergeant, Priest, Deacon.
Earl and Duke and Leroy and Sid are pretty common now, but the rest? Too weird.
I met a guy (who'd be early 30s now) who was named SIR, at a scholarship weekend, before I started college. Like, we were looking at the list of participants and went "...he's not seriously a knight, is he?" and then realized no, his parents had named him Sir. I guess they figured that way it'd always sound like he was being respected...
Sigh. The Washington Post has an article speculating on whether or not Sasha and Malia will join the Black Student Union at Sidwell, and if they do, what it'll mean for their father's "post-racial" reputation. This is getting ridiculous. [link]
Where the Dornis comes from, though, no one really knows.
Dunno about Dornis as a first name, but it's not uncommon for children to be given a family surname for a first name.
Dornis as a surname seems to come from Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Slovenia.
I met a guy ... who was named SIR, his parents had named him Sir. ...I guess they figured that way it'd always sound like he was being respected...
There used to be a practice among poor rural whites in the South and West of naming kids Judge and Colonel and General for just that reason. Occasional rather than common practice, but something that happened often enough not to be remarked upon.