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[Closed] Southwest Airlines apologises for mocking girl's name

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At my friend’s daughter’s school there was another girl called La-a, it’s pronounced Ladasha.

FFS, what's wrong with people?  I'm all for interesting names, I'd draw the line at bloody stupid ones.  She's going to spend half of her waking life explaining it to people.


 
Posted : 01/12/2018 2:55 pm
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I worked a kids Summer camp type thing one year in sunny Corby, and one lass rejoiced in the name of Scarlet Bliss Kettle.

You can really imagine it as the name of Chairwoman of the Board, can you?


 
Posted : 01/12/2018 5:52 pm
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At my friend’s daughter’s school there was another girl called La-a, it’s pronounced Ladasha.

Not in Glasgow is it? One of my colleagues was telling me the same about a young lass up there. Can't be many, can there???!!


 
Posted : 01/12/2018 6:12 pm
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Posted : 05/12/2018 1:37 pm
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According to the article in 2014 there were 328 children named Abcde in the US…!

Surely 327 of those have to be administrative errors - 'oh cock, I've started an entry by mistake and need to type something in... abcde 12345 it is'


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 1:48 pm
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At my friend’s daughter’s school there was another girl called La-a, it’s pronounced Ladasha.

Not in Glasgow is it? One of my colleagues was telling me the same about a young lass up there. Can’t be many, can there???!!

That's just a story taken from the Freakonomics book and regurgitated isn't it?


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 2:04 pm
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How about this one, someone named 1234 but pronounced Juan Tutrifor.

May not be true but seen it posted on Facebook somewhere yesterday.


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 3:00 pm
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People should have to pass sone kind of common sense test before they can have kids.


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 6:21 pm
 MSP
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Some countries don't allow parents to burden their children with idiotic names, I think that is the case in Germany, although it is getting more difficult to administer with parents who have migrated there.


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 8:17 pm
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The daughter's name is Abcde (pronounced ab-si-dee) ...

To be honest I don't know how to pronounce her name other than ... A-B-C-D-E.

Having said that how many of you can pronouce the surname Ng. (Not pronounce as N-G).

😀


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 10:28 pm
 Drac
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Ning.


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 10:33 pm
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Aren't these all urban myths?


 
Posted : 05/12/2018 10:39 pm
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Not in Glasgow is it? One of my colleagues was telling me the same about a young lass up there. Can’t be many, can there???!!

North east London.


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 12:15 am
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Having said that how many of you can pronouce the surname Ng

Lad at my secondary school had that surname, I think the name was from Vietnam.  Like Drac says we pronounced it Ning although this was Lanarkshire in 80s (not exactly a haven of multiculturalism) so was probably wrong and hugely insulting although also the best we could do.


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 8:42 am
 xora
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I used to have in-laws with kids who had the names "Bailey" and "Morgan" pretty sure they were their favourite drinks as both were apparently conceived under the influence!


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 9:36 am
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 Well Frank Zappa named his kids Dweezil, Ahmet, Moon-Unit and Diva (a bit ordinary that last one). But he said it was their surname that would cause them trouble.

1) No he didn't - his daughter's name is Moon. Unit is her middle name.

2) Ahmet is not an unusual name. Certainly more common in the world, I would guess, than "Diva" (could be wrong about that last part, not researched this).

 Having said that how many of you can pronouce the surname Ng. (Not pronounce as N-G).

All of us (unless there's anyone here without the power of speech) - the question would be better framed as "how many of you can be bothered to pronounce.." - If you can say words that end "-ing" then you can say words starting "ng-" you can just say "ing" and not voice the first bit. If you can say "-ing" then you can get your tongue and mouth into the right position. But it takes a little bit of conscious effort (at first) as it is an unfamiliar way of using it. So people who don't are just broadcasting that they don't have sufficient respect to make that little bit of effort.


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 9:52 am
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I never knew that Unit was her middle name, I always thought it was a two word first name. cool name 🙂


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 11:26 am
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Obvious urban legend about the chav parents wanting to name their daughter after the nice climbing flower: Chlamydia. Thankfully corrected by the registry staff before cursing the poor girl to a life of Pratchett-esq nominative determination.


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 11:55 am
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All leading to the inevitable in a few years...


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 12:03 pm
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My eldest is called Charlotte. When I went to register her birth the Registrar asked me how we were spelling that. "C H A R L O T T E", I said, "how many other ways are there to spell it?"

The registrar looked over her glasses, lowered her voice ans said "I could tell you some stories..."

10 mins later I was educated just how thick some people can be,


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 12:22 pm
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Having said that how many of you can pronouce the surname Ng.

There was a family at our school (well, the son & two daughters) with the family name of Ng. They were Chinese. My sister was fairly good friends with Mai Yee, the youngest girl.

Pretty sure their surname was pronounced like uungh - kinda like the muted noise you make as your crotch hits the stem during an uncontrolled dismount.
Although most people just said N G.


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 12:34 pm
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 pronounced like uungh

There's some variations (as with most words / languages) but whereas that isn't as far from "right" as many, there's no "u" at the start usually - if you think about your tongue when you say "ung" the tongue starts at the bottom of the mouth for the "u" and moves up and contacts the roof of the mouth as it becomes "ng" - so you just skip that first bit and start with your tongue against the roof of your mouth and you've cracked it. This is the bit that native English speakers find hard to get - while we can do the "ng" till the cows come home, we're not used to the starting position of the tongue / mouth as we're used to it running off a vowel sound of some kind.

This is taking me back to university linguistics tutorials with groups of students all making weird noises!


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 1:09 pm
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At my friend’s daughter’s school there was another girl called La-a, it’s pronounced Ladasha.

Poor kid.

I quite like this yin! 😆 creative!


 
Posted : 06/12/2018 1:16 pm
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