Re: Fanny and Dick (more)
in reply to a message by Perrine
It's unfortunate that Fanny is slang. I guess it's technically usable as a nickname, but who'd want to be called it? No one I know. As a full name, I don't think so. It'd seem incredible.
I'd like it better spelled Fanni or at least Fannie.
I think it's for Frances.
I think Dick seems not as bad because of being more common and still borne by well known men, so people can picture a man, rather than it just being a word hypothetically used as a name.
I don't think Dicks get teased because they're all adults and it'd be too juvenile to tease them to their face.
I doubt anyone would accept it as their nickname now, though, unless it was kind of a joke, like when a guy gets a 'bad' nickname from his friends' raillery.
- mirfak
I'd like it better spelled Fanni or at least Fannie.
I think it's for Frances.
I think Dick seems not as bad because of being more common and still borne by well known men, so people can picture a man, rather than it just being a word hypothetically used as a name.
I don't think Dicks get teased because they're all adults and it'd be too juvenile to tease them to their face.
I doubt anyone would accept it as their nickname now, though, unless it was kind of a joke, like when a guy gets a 'bad' nickname from his friends' raillery.
- mirfak
Replies
sorry, should be under the O P.
Oddly, there are a few women/girls named Fanny where I live.(French-speaking). One is a clerk at a grocery story I frequent, I see her name tag.
I think it's a given name, not short for Frances or Francine.
I also had an aunt Fanny (aunt by marriage)though that may have been a nick for Frances.
Oddly, there are a few women/girls named Fanny where I live.(French-speaking). One is a clerk at a grocery story I frequent, I see her name tag.
I think it's a given name, not short for Frances or Francine.
I also had an aunt Fanny (aunt by marriage)though that may have been a nick for Frances.
This message was edited 8/9/2018, 12:33 PM