also- I was so slammed this morning, I didn't have a chance to ask for job~ma for my 10am second interview, but I think I did OK, so I request hire~ma to be directed at the people making the decision this week.
I was vibing for you, Nora. Hire-ma now being directed across the Charles.
My sister got Margery. If you only kinda just heard her name, might be excusable. If you were in her class for years, decidedly less so. Which is how it went down.
Shir, really? That's cool - I love finding other women with my name!
Thanks for explaining how to pronounce your name. If I ever get to meet you, maybe I'll even get it right!
I'm pretty sure I've never had my first name pronounced incorrectly (apart from a friend who used to enjoy stretching it to two syllables in a sing-songy voice to annoy the crap out of me). My last name, well...that's another story. Doo-mays would be the least aggravating (at least it's close).
Shir, really? That's cool - I love finding other women with my name!
Only her second name, so she's not using it - it's just on her ID.
Now, the weird thing with Names of Family and Names of Buffistas, for me, is that Seska and The Girl's real names are just as my mother's first name and one of her sisters.
It's time to get ready to leave uni when the shelves numbers of the books you're looking for are starting to look funny/cool, right?
Now, the weird thing with Names of Family and Names of Buffistas, for me, is that Seska and The Girl's real names are just as my mother's first name and one of her sisters.
I hear you. My grandmother's name was Grace Matilda.
Yeah, welcome to my world. It's just a "t." It's nothing complicated or foreign to the US or UK ear. Everyone usually says it right once.
I have to concentrate to say the t, I'll confess. But I slip sounds together like whoa, and say my Fs as Vs and a whole bunch of other stuff.
Mick-GUN-eh-gull
Pretty close, then. (Aunt Dean's friend is Mick-GUN-uh-gull)
My name is awesome for confusing people. "Laura? Maura? Norma? Dora?" and then do not even get me started on my last name.
I immediately think of "A Doll's House," but I suppose "like Ibsen's Nora" might not get you very far in some circles. I have had to spell Ginger more times than you'd think, even after I do my "ginger ale, gingerbread, ginger snaps" routine. Most people won't even attempt my last name, which we pronounce the way one would pronounce any typical English word. I've heard the way Czechs really pronounce it, but I can't replicate it, plus I understand I should have a feminine ending on it. My great grandfather came over in the 1870s, so we're pretty far away from the old county.
I also have Zenkitty's problem, in that I was named for my mother and therefore have always been Ginger, to avoid confusion. I get checks made out to Ginger and I often forget whether I've used Ginger or Virginia when I signed up for something.