I agree henetha,i find it endearing too.
Two men charged with assaulting police officers after the Manchester Airport brawl
I agree henetha,i find it endearing too.
We particularly gave our children names that couldn't be shortened, then moved from Surrey to the West Country and discovered that .... here ... all names seem to be shortened, so Lucie became Luc .... pronounced Loose ....., which she obviously wasn't keen on. A friend's daughter named Michelle is called Meesh, etc etc
I actually quite like my name being shortened, with or without permission. It's just sort of friendly.
My bugbear is people getting my surname wrong. Many people with English as a second language get confused that we have surnames that can also be first name if you omit the S, such as Williams, Evans etc. I have often been called by my surname like this, as if I was a man. I find it very annoying. I can accept my first name being spelt and pronounced wrongly but not being called a man!
A few pairs of knickers getting in a twist here. My name can be shortened in many ways. I answer to anything - couldn’t care less. Still, I suppose if it causes upset just tell whoever is it to call you by your preferred name.
My name is disliked by any computer and changed to something different. I just retype - and grumble.
My next door neighbour if 40 years calls me a name that isn't my name. When we moved in, she told the neighbours that was what I was called so they call me that too. It's all very bizarre. She puts my correct name on cards.
I'm another with the opposite problem. I go by a shortened version of my name, but my whole name is on official documents such as NHS registers etc. I am not keen on people whom I address by their titles (doctors, nurses etc) using my given name anyway - I think it should be done one way or the other - but if they then use the full version of my name it feels worse. People can't win, I suppose.
Speaking of can't win - I'm not keen on being asked for a 'Christian name' anyway. I'm not a Christian, so it is inappropriate.
I was named after a flower.which I dislike(the name not the flower itself}. The name I use for GN is nothing like my real one. The only reason I never went about changing it was out of respect for my mother.
I wish, a lot of people I know add 2 letters to my name which changes the pronounciation , I do not respond at all, until they ask me why. Then I say something like 'oh, no one mentioned, my name so I assumed you were talking to someone else?'.
It works for a while.
Many years ago, an acquaintance we didn’t know well invited himself to dinner, and spent much of the evening trying to persuade us to buy life insurance from him. He kept using a shortened form of my name. When I went out to fetch something from the kitchen, my husband whispered to him that only my brothers and my lovers called me that - which was he? The rest of the evening, he oozed embarrassment and used my full name.
Robert Eliot coined the expression: "Don't sweat the small stuff." Richard Carlson used it as the title for his book.
When we sweat the small stuff, we experience stress, even if it's just a moment of exasperation, the cortisol levels in our bodies change, our cortisol levels may rise 10 to 15 percent when we frustrate over something small.
Chances are that both Eliot and Carlson have experienced the scenario of a name change. Robert being a Bob, Richard would most likely have been called Dick.
Just keep using your full name, sooner or later the message will get home.
I have always pointed out that my name was spelled incorrectly, if it was, or that I did not care for it being shortened.
There is no need to just accept this kind of thing.
When I worked in a large long stay hospital for people with learning disabilities which was closing, I found that community staff preparing people for life outside tended to abbreviate resident's names. I suppose they were just trying to appear chummy. Unfortunately, the residents didn't then know who was being addressed. For example a Patrick would stare past them if called Paddy so was thought to be deaf and Elizabeth had always been Elizabeth not Lizzie as these disrespectful new staff called her etc. This led to confusion and distress on all sides. Names matter, sometimes more than others.
I have the opposite problem - I don't really like my full name so give people the shortened version but many especially on the phone will insist on calling me by my full name.
A constant source of irritation when I worked for a US company was that the shortened version of my name is actually a man's name over there so they usually got a shock when they found out I was female - in Asia they got it the wrong way round and always thought my surname was my christian name especially as our e-mail configuration was surname then initial. I guess in the grand scheme of things it's not a huge issue but I do understand your frustration!
I have been sending Christmas cards to some people for over 40 years. Some, including my sister-in-law, still spell my name wrong on their cards to us.
This happens to DH all the time. Nine times out of ten when he tells someone his name they immediately shorten it. It's annoying but people seem to think it's OK. However his mam and siblings annoy him when they do it. I mean, you'd expect his family to get it right.
I have the opposite problem. I have a short name (4 letters) and people have a tendency to make it longer and/or spell it wrong.
We live in a less formal world than before so this sort of thing has become the norm.
During a series of hospital treatments I was asked 'what do you like to be called?' It felt too formal to say 'Mrs . . . . ' so I gave my first name.
I have old friends who always spell my name completely wrong I don’t get my knickers in a twist over it. If it annoys you tell them.
I find it strange that people you don’t know, use a shortened version of your name. I find it stranger that your name is shortened on official letters. I have not experienced this, but I can understand it being a ‘mild irritation’. Let it stay that way, ‘mild’, I mean. There are worse things happening around us...
This is happening increasingly. People shorten my name without asking if that’s OK. I don’t mind if it’s someone I know and I have given them the shortened version. I always use the full version on my official letters and meeting people officially and yet so many shorten my name when they reply. It’s a mild irritation but I wondered has any one else experienced this? Especially annoying if you don’t shorten your name I would think.
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