View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Bad Nicknames
I love Cynthia but not Cindy. One of my friends in high school was a Cynthia who was always called Cindy. There was another Cynthia in my class who wanted to be called Cynthia and not Cindy, but I noticed that she had to correct people, including teachers, who would call her Cindy. Cynthia is too dated for me to consider using, anyway.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Interesting. I've only ever heard Cindy and Cynthia on separate people, and I never even knew they were related until I looked it up somewhere. I just thought they were two different full names that were similarly dated (they always seemed to be the names of moms, teachers, office workers, etc.)
vote up1
The only Cindy I've ever known was a Lucinda. She was very pleasant and excellent company, but physically unremarkable bordering on plain: she had three exquisitely lovely sisters, and the family felt that a name as beautiful as Lucy would have been inappropriate as a nn; hence the Cindy! I've been slack-jawed with amazement for decades.Oh, and the only Cynthia I know doesn't use a nn at all.
vote up1
I have a stunningly, alarmingly, (physically) beautiful - and deeper still, she's a beautiful person, childhood friend by the real name of Cynthia - who goes by Cindy; We've always made it a point to poke (innocent) fun at each other by stating our full (first middle & last) names loudly & emphatically among others in public. We also have fun childish nick-names for each other because we've known the other since & through childhood. I got to know her mom at my first job - and I (metaphorically) loved the lady - who'd then share stories with her family about the crazy conversations we'd hold.

This message was edited 12/16/2018, 11:02 AM

vote up1
I'm not sure where Dracotorix is from, but assuming she's not American, perhaps it's cultural, as other than the Cynthia I mentioned in my post, every American Cynthia I've known went by Cindy. And even that Cynthia had to constantly correct people. Cindy is a very commonly used nickname for Cynthia in the US, and most Americans will assume a Cindy has Cynthia on her birth certificate.
vote up1
I'm American, but I might just be too young to have known many Cynthias/Cindys personally.ETA: There was actually one Cindy my age that I had class with in high school, but it wasn't short for anything.

This message was edited 12/15/2018, 1:37 PM

vote up1
I think you're probably right. I'd expect Cindy to be Lucinda too - the only one I've met was - and the only shortening for Cynthia, which is an over-70s name here, that I've heard is 'Cynth'
vote up1