I was talking to a woman and she said she wanted to meet her brother; he was getting out of a car. I called him by name and said that I'd met him at my husband's high school reunions. She said, "You have a really good memory." I answered, "He has an unusual name I'm not apt to forget; in fact, was he named for a character in Thomas Hardy's The Return Of The Native?" She said, "No, he was named for my father." I said, "Oh, then he's a Junior?" She said, "No, thank goodness; I hate the term junior." She said that her dislike of "junior" was the reason she named her son "the second."
I said, "So he's named after his paternal grandfather or paternal uncle." She looked at me with bewilderment and said, "No, he's named after his father." I said, "But it's only correct to name a boy the second if he's named after his paternal grandfather or uncle; if he's named for his father then it's junior." She said, "I've never heard that."
I said, "The best example is with Bobby Kennedy's sons; one son is Robert Francis Kennedy, Jr., and another son is one is Joseph Patrick Kennedy II because he's named for his grandfather and uncle."
I could tell that she didn't appreciate the information. When I told Les about it, he said, "Didn't you learn about foot- in- mouth disease when you corrected someone in Gerald's family?" (see my BLOG article THE SECOND)
I have noticed the practice of naming boys "the second" is quite prevalent in Fayette County.
1 comment:
That's good IDEAL! ML
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