You are Scotch and Chinese. Your parents met when the Gordon Highlanders were stationed in Hong Kong just before the turnover.
Your father, Robert Bruce Walker, was a promising bagpipe player and a corporal in the regiment. Your mother, Lim Chee Kuo, was a willowy college student with raven-black hair who loved bagpipe music. She used to listen to the pipe band practise, out in the New Territories where they would not disturb others. Robert noticed her. He was a student of languages in his spare time. She offered to help him practice his Cantonese; he offered her bagpipe lessons in turn.
Their love blossomed, but was never to be; she was the love child of Mao Tse Teng and deeply devoted Marxist, while he was the fourth son of the Laird of MacDuff and a strong supporter of the Feudal system. After his National Service was up, he returned to manage the family estates.
Your mother bore you and gave you to the nuns at St. Mary's Home, in Kwaloon, to raise. They adopted you out to those two people who you have thought were your parents all those years, despite the fact they are Norwegian and you are obviously Eurasian.
Glad you asked.
2006-11-28 08:06:58
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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In Gaelic (both Irish and Scottish), Mac or Mc means 'son of' and 'O' denotes feminine or Daughter of. So, Sean MacDonald would mean Sean, the son of Donald, or Patricia O'Donald meaning Patricia, daughter of Donald. The families formed into Clans and all members took their full names from the Clan leader - ie., the MacDonalds, the O'Sullivans etc. On the other hand, Fitz means 'illegitimate son of' as in Fitzsimons (from the Normans). A very interesting side to names for Americans, is the fact that when the influx of foreigners during the 18th and 19th centuries were being assessed on entry, they could not speak English. That is why a lot of especially Irish and Scots gave their home towns as their names and you have families with surnames such as Bray, Cork, Kerry etc. as a result..............
2006-11-28 05:34:18
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answer #2
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answered by thomasrobinsonantonio 7
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I can help you, I am a Walker descendant, however there were two completely unrelated Walker families in Ky that came from Scotland. I'd need to know who your parents, and grandparents are and some dates, names etc.
2006-12-01 23:04:39
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answer #3
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answered by JBWPLGCSE 5
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With a beautiful name like that?
I would endeavor to to become Scottish.
2006-11-28 05:19:30
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answer #4
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answered by Doubting Thomas 4
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Hehehehe funny answers
2006-11-28 09:01:17
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answer #5
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answered by Riderya 3
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your heritage is what you see around you now. Everything you touch, everything you see can be yours or is yours now and forever more.
2006-11-28 05:22:20
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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How are we supposed to know? Ask you're relatives.
2006-11-28 05:21:00
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answer #7
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answered by ScrawL 2
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