Lean'n'mean
I'll Lock Up
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On the other hand, I knew of a guy who went by the name of "Brick" Mason.
He was a florist.
Makes sense......Florists do use foam bricks for flower arrangements.
On the other hand, I knew of a guy who went by the name of "Brick" Mason.
He was a florist.
Well,
We have the habit of having 5 names here, don't ask me why.
I'm not bothering you with my full name.
Esther was a fashionable name when I was born.
So where double names.
My actual name is Esther Muriel, but no one ever calls me that.
(Thank god! )
I get asked quite a bit if I'm Jewish, but I'm not.
I know at least 4 other Esther's in my generation...
I adore my grandparent's names.
My grandpa's full name was Gaston Casimir but went by Stonne.
(That's as Antwerpian as you can get)
My grandma's was Clara Anna.
Both very typical for that time here in Belgium.
My German family has a bunch of great German names.
My grandpa was a Hans, my grandma was a Julia. My uncles, mother and aunt are very German as well.
Helga,Jutta,Jürgen and Hartmut.
My father's side are all official french names but go by another one.
Since one had to have an official French sounding name in Belgium.
Eduard goes by Ward, Bertin goes by Bert etc.
My sisters names are what they consider standard names of their time.
I can't speak for others, but if you are willing, I'd love to hear the five part name which would make you the only five-part-name person I'd know. My dad thought middle names were nonsense (he had strong opinions about everything) so I have two names - my Christian name and my surname - and that's it.
Well, your dad is right
I can't figure out why on earth we have 5 names, since we aren't religious or anything.
My full name is Esther Muriel Gerda Guido Alexander Weis.
That is a mouthful right?
d'Anconia? or are you referring to the clock company?
I supposed as much. I've ended up posting far, far more risible things after a bout with Auto-correct. Actually, I think that the character's name may have been suggested to Miss Rand by the association with the clock company, which of course was founded as a subsidiary of the Ansonia Brass and Copper Company, a firm which traded until recently as Phelps, Dodge, & Co.
Or perhaps it ended up as a portmanteau of "Ansonia" and "Anaconda", another major non-ferrous metals firm with large interests in Chile and Peru. Naturally, although the mining concessions were in reality controlled by European and American capital, for the purposes of the book it would just not do to have a South American mining magnate with a surname like "Guggenheim", 'Phelps" or "Hanna".
That's some smart insight into the origin of his name as my guess is you are right and the name didn't just spring forth fully formed from her imagination. Names are one of those things that she clearly put much thought into as you don't come up with Francisco..., Ragnar Danneskjold, Ellsworth Toohey or Domonique Francon - to name just a few - with casual effort.
That is so crazy, it's awesome. It's a name from an Ayn Rand novel - like her character "Francisco Domingo Carlos Andres Sebastián d'Anconia."
My other thought was does anyone ever say "God Bless you" after you say your full name?
Thank you for sharing - you are a good sport.
Don't you find that kind of impertinence annoying? Both you and your husband have biblical names that could be construed as Jewish, so what? The way some people question others, it gets me so cross, what does it matter what you are? And why does that kind of question always come with a tone of voice that implies that Jews, or any other ethnic race are some sort of head shrinkers. Tina and I were at a 40th birthday party, held on a Sunday afternoon, so that families could attend, it was many years ago. The kitchen had been turned into a makeshift creche but nobody really did anything to amuse the kids, so I kept them busy with card tricks and various silly games. Almost every parent there said: "Oh you would make a great Dad." A harmless remark, probably meant as a compliment, but inwardly I found it very impertinent.I get asked quite a bit if I'm Jewish, but I'm not.
Don't you find that kind of impertinence annoying? Both you and your husband have biblical names that could be construed as Jewish, so what? The way some people question others, it gets me so cross, what does it matter what you are? And why does that kind of question always come with a tone of voice that implies that Jews, or any other ethnic race are some sort of head shrinkers. Tina and I were at a 40th birthday party, held on a Sunday afternoon, so that families could attend, it was many years ago. The kitchen had been turned into a makeshift creche but nobody really did anything to amuse the kids, so I kept them busy with card tricks and various silly games. Almost every parent there said: "Oh you would make a great Dad." A harmless remark, probably meant as a compliment, but inwardly I found it very impertinent.
In naming customs, from the 17th to 19th centuries, Old Testament names were very common for boys. Think Isaac Newton, Abraham Lincoln, Samuel Adams and so forth. After the beginning of the 20th they dropped off for gentiles except for a few: David, Jonathan, Joseph among some others, but those were also the names of Christian saints. From the early 20th on, an Old Testament name often indicated that you were Jewish while a Minor Prophet name or one of the more obscure Old Testament figures, meant either Jewish or a member of a rural fundamentalist or African American church: Amos, Nahum, Zebediah, Jeremiah, Zebulon, Boaz, Hiram, Omri, Nimrod and others. For some reason, nobody ever names a son Cain. Recently, these obscure OT names have been making a comeback. I know a boy named Caleb and there are a couple of Joshuas hereabout. I have yet to encounter a Jehosaphat.