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If your answer is more than 2, could you then answer the following question: http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AgJL4OyQ2tyJPpdhUtSXmt4hBgx.?qid=20070603023118AAiBt7I

Thank you.

2007-06-04 01:16:05 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

10 answers

At the nuclear family-level four--my parents, born in 1920 and 1925 respectively, didn't have a lot of imagination--or else were very traditional--and named both my brother and me after themselves. This didn't cause a lot of problems when I was growing up since family and friends called me by my middle name. This practice didn't seem all that unusual at the time either because many of my friends growing up shared their name with a mother or father.

Similarly, my maternal grandparents named their oldest daughter, Mary, and son, David, after themselves while my father was named after his own father, although my grandparents inserted the last name of their minister as his middle name. Curiously, however, he wasn't the first-born son, who, in this case, was name after my grandmother's father--an old Southern custom.

Actually the practice of naming the first-born son after the father makes a lot of sense when tracing a family tree. Take my maternal grandmother's mother's family, the McQuerrys, for example. Her father William (1834-1909) named his first-born son William (b. 1863); William's father was named Charles, and he was the second son. Charles (1802-1866) also had a first-born son named Charles, but he named his second-born son, the above-mentioned William (1834-1909) after his father, William (1765-32). This William was a second-born son; the first born, John (1764-1832), was named after his father John (1707-1790) who, in turn, was named after his father, John (1683-1755). The John born in 1707 changed his name from Macquarrie to McQuerry upon coming to America (from Eigg, Inverness, Scotland--one of the Inner Hebrides), but because of the family's almost religious adherence to traditional Scottish-naming practices for over 250 years, I can be reasonably sure that I am a 9th generation descendant of the John who lived from 1683 to 1755. By the way, a good many of the first-born daughters were named after their mother, whose name was usually Mary.

I've also noticed that my maternal grandmother's father's family followed an almost identical naming scheme. Since my great-grandfather was a first-generation, Irish-Catholic American, I presume his family was following tradition: Bernard and Patrick Doughertys go back in time for at least five generations. Again, the oldest daughter is usually named Mary after her mother.

Of course, my brother threw tradition out the window and broke the chain.

2007-06-04 02:47:51 · answer #1 · answered by Ellie Evans-Thyme 7 · 0 0

None.
For some reason, my parents, grandparents, etc..... thought that spelling a persons name had to be different. Example: The name Gina isn't spelled with the G. It's spelled with a J instead. But it's still pronounce the same as spelling it with the G.
And back in the early 1800's, someone decided to name one of my aunts: Freelove. My opinion, that's weird for that era!

2007-06-04 07:00:38 · answer #2 · answered by deerislandnan 2 · 0 0

My dad, eldest brother, cousin on my mom's side, brother in law and his father all are named Christopher.

On middle-names, on my mother's side, all the women from my grandmother's generation down to the present generation coming up (younger than me) have all got Marian middle names - ie: Mary, Marie or Maria.

2007-06-04 02:14:15 · answer #3 · answered by Crizzy 2 · 0 0

my mother was Violet lee and I am Violet Jean. My Neice is Violet Irene and My granddaughter is Violet Kristen.We are just ordinary people and we all go by our first name.Your name does not shape you your personality does.and that answers the other question,does a baby's name affect their personality.No I dont believe it does. your environment and how you are raised are the key factors.

2007-06-04 03:19:02 · answer #4 · answered by jean s 2 · 1 0

My nephew has just married for the second time and she has the same name as me, the amazing thing is she has the same middle name to.

2007-06-04 01:33:01 · answer #5 · answered by itsjustme 7 · 0 0

none, i used to have a 5th or 6th cousin with the same first and last name but then she got married so now its just the first name... but ive only met her once and its a very distant connection so i would say zero

2007-06-04 01:27:51 · answer #6 · answered by hissyfit767 2 · 0 0

My family has 38 names which are the same, (Harry) and my child will also be named Harry!

2007-06-04 01:56:13 · answer #7 · answered by xStacex 3 · 0 0

My father, and a brother who's named after our father.

2007-06-04 05:26:13 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

too many thats why i chose different names for my kids to break the chain cos it was getting so silly.

2007-06-04 01:46:08 · answer #9 · answered by kt 3 · 0 0

two

2007-06-04 01:18:34 · answer #10 · answered by Vacinando 3 · 0 0

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