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#111
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On 6 Jan 2021 at 11:39:54 GMT, ""NY"" wrote:
"Roland Perry" wrote in message ... It's an interesting difference between UK and US: here in the UK middle names and initials are rarely used - almost never in the printed name below a handwritten signature or in the salutation ("Dear ...") on a letter. And very rarely in official lists (examination results etc). And not on signs on office doors. In the US, a middle initial seems to be mandatory. But in the UK very often used in a nickname; DNA - Douglas Adams, for example. Or his one-time classmate who wrote the worst poetry: PNMG. The best nickname (nominative determinism?) was the head of department in the electronic engineering department where I worked. He was known as Bill Taylor but his nickname was J-Omega. Then I saw his initials and the penny dropped: JWT (W=Bill). Electronic engineering formula of quantities that vary over time often have terms that involve j omega t (square root of minus 1, angular frequency = 2 pi f, time). Ah yes, nominative determinism... The Tree Protection Officer in the local authority where my cousin lives is (or at least was then) a Mr. Branch. And an upholsterer living and working near Crawley (West Sussex) some forty years ago was a Mr Comfort. -- Robert |
#112
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Robert wrote:
On 6 Jan 2021 at 11:39:54 GMT, ""NY"" wrote: "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... It's an interesting difference between UK and US: here in the UK middle names and initials are rarely used - almost never in the printed name below a handwritten signature or in the salutation ("Dear ...") on a letter. And very rarely in official lists (examination results etc). And not on signs on office doors. In the US, a middle initial seems to be mandatory. But in the UK very often used in a nickname; DNA - Douglas Adams, for example. Or his one-time classmate who wrote the worst poetry: PNMG. The best nickname (nominative determinism?) was the head of department in the electronic engineering department where I worked. He was known as Bill Taylor but his nickname was J-Omega. Then I saw his initials and the penny dropped: JWT (W=Bill). Electronic engineering formula of quantities that vary over time often have terms that involve j omega t (square root of minus 1, angular frequency = 2 pi f, time). Ah yes, nominative determinism... The Tree Protection Officer in the local authority where my cousin lives is (or at least was then) a Mr. Branch. And an upholsterer living and working near Crawley (West Sussex) some forty years ago was a Mr Comfort. Perhaps his grandson, Dean Ian Sean Comfort, is now in charge of railway seat design? |
#113
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Mike Humphrey wrote:
On Wed, 06 Jan 2021 09:31:21 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: On of the UoEd’s schools used to use login names based on initials but they were at least 3 characters long. People without a middle name got an “x” inserted, so S.... W.... (not me) was “sxw”. It looked odd when you first saw one - “oh, I didn’t know Steve’s middle name was Xavier...” According to DVLA, my middle initial is "9". Yes, the number nine. Driver numbers are based on your surname plus first and middle initials, but if you don't have a middle name you get a "9" instead. Does your driver number end x99xx, where x is a letter? I have two middle names and thus three initials but my driver number ends with ii9xx where ii are my first two initials and xx are apparently random letters. Sam -- The entity formerly known as Spit the dummy to reply |
#114
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![]() "Sam Wilson" wrote in message ... Arthur Figgis wrote: On 05/01/2021 18:17, Sam Wilson wrote: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 16:22:35 on Tue, 5 Jan 2021, Tweed remarked: It's just a cultural thing, like many Europeans have names like Magnus Magnus*son*, and innumerable similar Slavic suffices. Slavic? I thought it came from the Icelandic. There surnames come from the first name of the parent. Yes, hence the use of the word "similar" (not "identical") I’ve recently found this fascinating and instructive: https://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-personal-names The Afghan politican Abdullah Abdullah allegedly only had one name originally, but he got so fed up with people from elsehwere asking for his other name that he decided it was easiest to double it so he had one. George Brown, the tired and emotional Labour politician, became Lord George-Brown on his elevation to the peerage because he still wanted to be called George Brown, even though peers are conventionally known only by their surnames. He had to change his name to George George-Brown to do it, though. Boutros Boutros-Ghali did something similar but I don’t know the details. Harmar Nicholls, MP for Peterborough and father of Audreh Roberts from Corrie, did the same. James |
#115
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On Thu, 07 Jan 2021 10:13:59 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote:
Mike Humphrey wrote: On Wed, 06 Jan 2021 09:31:21 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: On of the UoEd’s schools used to use login names based on initials but they were at least 3 characters long. People without a middle name got an “x” inserted, so S.... W.... (not me) was “sxw”. It looked odd when you first saw one - “oh, I didn’t know Steve’s middle name was Xavier...” According to DVLA, my middle initial is "9". Yes, the number nine. Driver numbers are based on your surname plus first and middle initials, but if you don't have a middle name you get a "9" instead. Does your driver number end x99xx, where x is a letter? I have two middle names and thus three initials but my driver number ends with ii9xx where ii are my first two initials and xx are apparently random letters. Yes - M99xx. There seems to be some disagreement over what the second 9 means but Wikipedia says that it is to distinguish otherwise-identical numbers. It starts at 9 and then counts down if needed to avoid a duplicate number. I guess it's only likely to happen if twins have the same first initial, or an unlikely coincidence. Mike |
#116
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"Mike Humphrey" wrote in message
... On Thu, 07 Jan 2021 10:13:59 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: Mike Humphrey wrote: On Wed, 06 Jan 2021 09:31:21 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: On of the UoEd’s schools used to use login names based on initials but they were at least 3 characters long. People without a middle name got an “x” inserted, so S.... W.... (not me) was “sxw”. It looked odd when you first saw one - “oh, I didn’t know Steve’s middle name was Xavier...” According to DVLA, my middle initial is "9". Yes, the number nine. Driver numbers are based on your surname plus first and middle initials, but if you don't have a middle name you get a "9" instead. Does your driver number end x99xx, where x is a letter? I have two middle names and thus three initials but my driver number ends with ii9xx where ii are my first two initials and xx are apparently random letters. Yes - M99xx. There seems to be some disagreement over what the second 9 means but Wikipedia says that it is to distinguish otherwise-identical numbers. It starts at 9 and then counts down if needed to avoid a duplicate number. I guess it's only likely to happen if twins have the same first initial, or an unlikely coincidence. Not necessarily twins - anyone of the same gender, with the same name(s), born on the same date. Does it provide enough disambiguation to cope with common names (the stereotypical "John Smith") of whom there may be a *lot* born on the same date. |
#117
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NY wrote:
"Mike Humphrey" wrote in message ... On Thu, 07 Jan 2021 10:13:59 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: Mike Humphrey wrote: On Wed, 06 Jan 2021 09:31:21 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: On of the UoEd’s schools used to use login names based on initials but they were at least 3 characters long. People without a middle name got an “x” inserted, so S.... W.... (not me) was “sxw”. It looked odd when you first saw one - “oh, I didn’t know Steve’s middle name was Xavier...” According to DVLA, my middle initial is "9". Yes, the number nine. Driver numbers are based on your surname plus first and middle initials, but if you don't have a middle name you get a "9" instead. Does your driver number end x99xx, where x is a letter? I have two middle names and thus three initials but my driver number ends with ii9xx where ii are my first two initials and xx are apparently random letters. Yes - M99xx. There seems to be some disagreement over what the second 9 means but Wikipedia says that it is to distinguish otherwise-identical numbers. It starts at 9 and then counts down if needed to avoid a duplicate number. I guess it's only likely to happen if twins have the same first initial, or an unlikely coincidence. Not necessarily twins - anyone of the same gender, with the same name(s), born on the same date. Does it provide enough disambiguation to cope with common names (the stereotypical "John Smith") of whom there may be a *lot* born on the same date. I’d always assumed that that was what the final xx was for - 26 x 26, or 30-something squared if you include digits except for 0 and 1, perhaps, 676 or more combinations. Anyone got enough data to hand to do a back of the envelope calculation as to what the odds are of 676 J.Smiths being being born on a single day? Sam -- The entity formerly known as Spit the dummy to reply |
#118
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On 6 Jan 2021 at 23:19:13 GMT, "Recliner" wrote:
Robert wrote: On 6 Jan 2021 at 11:39:54 GMT, ""NY"" wrote: "Roland Perry" wrote in message ... It's an interesting difference between UK and US: here in the UK middle names and initials are rarely used - almost never in the printed name below a handwritten signature or in the salutation ("Dear ...") on a letter. And very rarely in official lists (examination results etc). And not on signs on office doors. In the US, a middle initial seems to be mandatory. But in the UK very often used in a nickname; DNA - Douglas Adams, for example. Or his one-time classmate who wrote the worst poetry: PNMG. The best nickname (nominative determinism?) was the head of department in the electronic engineering department where I worked. He was known as Bill Taylor but his nickname was J-Omega. Then I saw his initials and the penny dropped: JWT (W=Bill). Electronic engineering formula of quantities that vary over time often have terms that involve j omega t (square root of minus 1, angular frequency = 2 pi f, time). Ah yes, nominative determinism... The Tree Protection Officer in the local authority where my cousin lives is (or at least was then) a Mr. Branch. And an upholsterer living and working near Crawley (West Sussex) some forty years ago was a Mr Comfort. Perhaps his grandson, Dean Ian Sean Comfort, is now in charge of railway seat design? Now there's a thought...! Ouch. -- Robert |
#119
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On 06/01/2021 23:19, Recliner wrote:
Robert wrote: And an upholsterer living and working near Crawley (West Sussex) some forty years ago was a Mr Comfort. Perhaps his grandson, Dean Ian Sean Comfort, is now in charge of railway seat design? No, that job went to Simon Attica. -- Basil Jet recently enjoyed listening to 1999 - Ghosts Of Dead Aeroplanes - Prolapse |
#120
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Mike Humphrey wrote:
On Thu, 07 Jan 2021 10:13:59 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: Mike Humphrey wrote: On Wed, 06 Jan 2021 09:31:21 +0000, Sam Wilson wrote: On of the UoEd’s schools used to use login names based on initials but they were at least 3 characters long. People without a middle name got an “x” inserted, so S.... W.... (not me) was “sxw”. It looked odd when you first saw one - “oh, I didn’t know Steve’s middle name was Xavier...” According to DVLA, my middle initial is "9". Yes, the number nine. Driver numbers are based on your surname plus first and middle initials, but if you don't have a middle name you get a "9" instead. Does your driver number end x99xx, where x is a letter? I have two middle names and thus three initials but my driver number ends with ii9xx where ii are my first two initials and xx are apparently random letters. Yes - M99xx. There seems to be some disagreement over what the second 9 means but Wikipedia says that it is to distinguish otherwise-identical numbers. It starts at 9 and then counts down if needed to avoid a duplicate number. I guess it's only likely to happen if twins have the same first initial, or an unlikely coincidence. Is it that unlikely that more than one, say, S B Smith would be born on the same day? Anna Noyd-Dryver |
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