I've met a couple Marys who were named for their mothers -- I think they all were Irish Catholic, IIRC.
Book ,'Our Mrs. Reynolds'
Natter 65: Speed Limit Enforced by Aircraft
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
No one cared. Boo.
I cared! I bought one of them!
I am home. And now that I'm fed, about to log in to my work email, dammit.
Excellent, Cash!
I'm bringing: a stack of books, spring jackets (levi's denim, so cool) temporary tattoos, a Mars Rover poster signed by the lab director at JPL, and a tutu home for my niece and nephew.
And yet, I feel I have not purchased enough spoiling goods.
We do have stores here, you know...
I'm doing museum visits, and possibly horsey rides. And am also going to plant the seed that Auntie lives less than an hour from Disneyland.
so not to worry about calling me to check on things.
This is likely key for them to know.
Ugh, I am so sorry you have to deal with all of this.
Everyone talking about not worrying about space on Gmail is freaking me out. You run out of space at 7.5 GB, people. I get yelled at by them all of the darn time. They swore that if I switched to them, I'd never have to worry abut this. They fibbed.
A nice show of sportsmanship by some teenage soccerplayers: [link]
I am named entirely for my mother, yet I don't get to be a junior.
I knew a Laura who was called Laura Jr. by her family and friends, but I don't think she wrote it on documents.
My aunt Mary Jo (of pope killing fame) is named for her mother who always went by just Mary (though her middle name was also Josephine).
I think the use of "Jr." goes away with the assumption that the successive female will end up changing her last name.