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Cranberry Sauce...( ( (what's Yours?) ) )
Posted By: Deremiah *CPE on 11/22/2004 10:57 AM (CST) 296 Points
Growing up in Oklahoma I had an interesting nick-name that was just beginning to sink deep into the hearts of the American culture...It was the name of something that a lot of people loved to eat and in my state of consciousness a name to die for. One day while playing a basketball game kids gave me the ultimate nick-name and it was smooth like butter...they called me "Butterball" and from then on it stuck.

In this generation of Taglines, lick & stick name tags, we are Naming to brand and building brand names that express our organizations status, purpose or product line so I've got an interesting but peculiar question.

Q1) What is the craziest nick-name you've ever heard?

Q2) What's the childhood nick name you may have been called?

Let's GO FOr It...something light or is it (lite) and something simple.

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)



Posted by: Carl Crawford Accepted Answer
11/22/2004 11:37 AM (CST)
hi Deremiah,

Q1) the craziest nickname i have ever heard was:

Pooie

it was because the guy didn’t wear deodorant and smelled really bad. once the teacher told him to go home and put on some deodorant in front of the class.

Q2) My nickname was:

FireBall

I picked it up because one of my fellow students was setting toilet paper rolls on fire and throwing them from the second story building. One of them landed on my bag and set it alight while i was wearing it.

Carl Crawford (FireBall)
 

Posted by: Pepper Blue Accepted Answer
11/22/2004 12:34 PM (CST)
Hi Deremiah,

A couple stand out from my youth:

One kid in high school was nicknamed "Sewer Rat" because of his disheveled appearance. I don't think anybody every knew his first name, he wasn't popular and was a real stoner and was commonly referred to and accepted the "Sewer Rat" label.

Another was "Crabs". He got his name because of....well let's just say because of a socially communicable "thing" he picked up from one of the local not-so-pure girls.

Then there was "Puddles" and "Squirrel". I can't mention their origins here.

With a last name like Pepper I've had many nicknames, some unprintable, but none that stuck throughout my life. "Doc/Doctor" was popular, and "Sarge/Sergeant".

I hope that helps!

 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/22/2004 1:41 PM (CST)
Well Fireball & Sargent,

you all have helped to give the importance of why name brands work and nicknames stick. Thanks for breaking it down and not just speeding through the question.

Your Servant,

Deremiah, *CPE
 

Posted by: night_butterflz Accepted Answer
11/22/2004 2:32 PM (CST)
1. One is Squeeky and the other is cornbread. Squeeky for our high school QB, cause he could squeek by anyone. Cornbread was another football player's name but I don't know why he was called that.

2. Nickname- was 'bird' because i would break my food apart before I ate/eat it.

 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/22/2004 3:15 PM (CST)
night_butterflz,

I just think you have the most interesting KHE customer profile name...night_butterflz...just makes me want to fly like butter...

hey we got the butter,
yo I didn't stutter.
Night butterflz,
Fireball wise,
With Sarge or Doc,
oh it's time to Rock.
Here we go again
me all my friends...

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: SRyan ;] Accepted Answer
11/22/2004 8:07 PM (CST)
If I reveal my childhood nickname, ya'll might stop taking me seriously here! ;]

Jellybean.

Not necessarily because I was sweet or chewy, just because it rhymed with Shelley. (And don't confuse me with Deremiah's gumdrop buttons!)

On a more recent note... at BirdNest we chose some "codename" identities for ourselves. What else could the CEO be except Big Bird??
 

Posted by: jillm Accepted Answer
11/22/2004 9:16 PM (CST)
Shelley -- at least you were Jellybean... I have often been called Jillybean, which does not really make me very happy. (I only tolerate it {barely} from certain people...)

Nicknames I've had in the past: Hoover, Spud, Jilly Willy (that last one is never tolerated by me!).

Nicknames of others that were a little off: Noodle Boy (he managed to burn people simply by taking the noodle out of the pan in cooking class!), and Star (he thought he was a star, but the rest of us knew otherwise...).

Fun!

- Jill

 

Posted by: D4Demand Accepted Answer
11/22/2004 9:53 PM (CST)
No lie. I heard it from my highsxchool girlfriend's mom.

The boy in the couple was referred to by his girlfirend as A**hole. It was her term of endearment for him.

In 1959 my brother was nicknamed Hippy -- short for swivel hips. Who knew that it would be such a common reference in the later 60's?

My nicknames included the Doctor (I worked at a drug store and told my firends I "sold" drugs) and "Pick the Stick" because of my build.




 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/22/2004 10:47 PM (CST)
Shelley,

what a great nick-name and I just knew you had something in common with my little gum-drop buttons...but Shelley you remember that episode I had with them. Jill thanks for winning the bold award. You have shared more nicknames by one person than anyone who has posted...but spud. When I was real, real young before the Butterball nickname they called me "little bit" and "sweet thang" but don't tell anybody I told you that Jill. D4Demand...pick the stick that's the most unique given today. Some of the boys I mentor often call me "look at those guns" for the big biceps I garner...they often say how can he be short and muscular...you're an oxymoron. Well tell a friend to join in. You all are the greatest but Shelley is pretty smart.

Is there anything else I can do for you?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: Jim Deveau/Catalyst* Accepted Answer
11/23/2004 5:00 PM (CST)
Hiya:

This one always makes me smile. I had a college friend with a slightly peculiar facial feature - his eyes bulged ever so slightly. His frat brothers christened him with:

Wombat.

Well, Bob eventually became a highly successful president of an operating company of a Fortune 100 corporation. Imagine the suprise and eventual glee of his executive assistant when she received a personal call for "Wombat".

Ya just can't shake some things, no matter how professional or succesful you become.

As for me - I am afraid that Jimbo was my limit in high school (soccer nickname). On the field everyone is a Johnny or a Billy or a Jimbo.



 

Posted by: Colleen Sharen* Accepted Answer
11/24/2004 8:20 AM (CST)
I have a girlfriend who's nickname is Taz, short for the Tazmanian Devil (the cartoon...) You can imagine the personality.

Another friend has a nickname, Cement Head. Apparently his punk look in the 80s was the inspiration that a couple of locals needed to create that name. And it stuck...

My nickname varies, depending on whether family or friends. My favourite is Buzz, short for Old Buzzard. It was my grandmother's nickname, so I think of it as a treasure passed down to me.
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/24/2004 12:28 PM (CST)
Jim & Colleen,

I love the sound of nick-names...they are an expression of what people call us when we are in our most vulnerable positions around those who know us well.

WHY THEY CALL ME THE DOCTOR
One of my adult nick-names like Pepper blue was the Doctor. It's really quite interesting that Shelley off handedly called me that one day but I got pinned with that name back in 2000.

There was a young lady in our office where I was a security consultant. She was limping quite frequently after she had surgery. I noticed that the limping seemed to be getting worst over a few months. As friends do I asked her how it was going and she explained that her surgery started off well but now she was having problems.

Being a four sport athlete and someone who has studied the human anatomy through countless hours of figure drawing in school I asked her to take a seat and let me look at her range of motion in her leg. I noticed that she could not extend her leg straight out completely. She said there was much pain and she was going through weekly rehab on it and her doctor said it would get better but it was not. Since the knee is a hinge joint I explained there must be something there blocking this range of motion. Intuitively (because there are still some parts of Eve in this Adam called Deremiah) I explained...

Since she was African American (and quite a few African American's have abnormal tissue growth called keloid) I drew the conclusion that she had abnormall tissue growth in between the knee joint. Since her doctor had already been working with her injury over a couple of years I recommended that she go to a sports medicine doctor for one of the professional teams in Chicago and share with them what I shared with her. I told her that the sports doctor would have much more experience with injurys like the one that caused hers.

She did what I said and ran into a problem with her HMO... finally a secretary who heard about her problem gave her an opportunity to visit a doctor outside of her HMO and the secretary said that she did not know why she was doing this but she was.

She went to a sports doctor who was amazed at my analysis but felt that he would put a scope in the knee and find out. Sure enough the young lady came back to me with photographs from that procedure and it was exactly as I suspected. Tentacle like tissue that had grown abnormally was preventing her knee from closing. When her knee was straight the tissue was pinched between the knee creating great pain.

The sports Doctor was allowed to do the surgery and she was given permission to have two visits with him after that. They gave her medication to slow down excessive tissue growth. Rehab was implemented again and I became known as "The Doctor".

Tell me how you got your nickname if you dare?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: km2000* Accepted Answer
11/24/2004 2:50 PM (CST)
Nicknames.... Hoo boy, I seem to attract them...

With the last name Hinds (pronounced like "mines"):
'Ketchup' was VERY popular - pretty much carried me thru grade and high school.
'Heinz 57' popped up on occasion.
My Jr. High band director called me Duncan. (Yep, like the cookie mix.)

Kate is my name of choice (given name is Kathryn), so Kate-lin and Kate-rin were common.
I have 2 friends that (a married couple) that refer to me a Katie-bear - I have NO idea why. (I'm pretty sure I don't resemble a bear, altho my temper can be a tad 'grizzly-like' when pushed to the edge.) ;)

In college Abu (the monkey from "Aladdin") started and a couple years ago I was dubbed 'the mosquito'. Apparently, they're somewhat reflective of my 'energetic' personality.

And there you have it... "Kate's Nicknames O'Plenty"
(Is it any wonder that I just sign my posts 'k.'?)

Have a good one!
k.
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/24/2004 3:06 PM (CST)
Km2000, (thanks for daring to go there)

What a dose of nick names you've been given and I'm sure they all made sense to everyone who called you.

However I must say that Kate is a very pretty name but that's just my opinion which these days is worth a cool million or two in inspirational dollars. Maybe one day soon I'll dare ask the question of all questions and I would love to hear your take on it. In the mean time shoot me an email and tell me how your turn of the century farm house restoration is coming along. Hey K, Kate, BIG K or Lil K, is there anything I can do for you?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evanglelist)
 

Posted by: Stokefire* Accepted Answer
11/24/2004 3:57 PM (CST)
Boy... I wish I had an interesting story to tell.

Growing up, my friends were not really the creative types. When it came to giving me my name they just went with the easy ones:

Tatertot and 'tater.

I would have eaten my own arm off to have a name like "Skip", "Junior", or "Rocket" like the cool kids had.

But no. I got named after starch lumps.

Tate
 

Posted by: km2000* Member Response
11/24/2004 4:49 PM (CST)
Aww Tate,

It's ok. There's nothing wrong with your nicknames...

I know I've many a fond memory of tasty little 'starch lumps' (dipped in ketchup, of course) as a side dish to those cute little fish sticks you get in the blue boxes.


Besides, your 'real' name rhymes with mine... that's gotta register on the 'cool scale' somewhere.
*grin*

k.
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/24/2004 7:54 PM (CST)
THE KHE NICKNAME RAPP

hey we got the butter,
yo I didn't stutter.
Night butterflz,
Fireball wise,
With Sarge or Doc,
oh it's time to Rock.
Here we go again
me & all my friends...


Jelleybean's hot,
Hoover's got a lot
Pick the Stick again
Jimbo's got'ta win,
Buzz got snazz,
Abu got game,
Tattertot's funny
& D's got the money.

Here we go again
me & all my friends...
you can join right in,
cuz everybody wins
KHE got fame,
& the nickname game.

THANKS to all my KHE friends
 

Posted by: Ricky Accepted Answer
11/25/2004 4:21 AM (CST)
The best nickname I've ever heard was "The H Man". This guy I dated in college used to play baseball for our college team. Well, there was a big game and everyone was listening to the radio when the announcer informed us of the players who couldn't participate in the game because of their various injuries. A broken leg here, a strained muscle there. Until the announcer got to my ex . . . who would sit out the game because of "a bad case of the hemorrhoids".

So, the nicknames started, and not just from his teammates, since the most of the students heard the whole thing. They called him Preperation, Preperation H, or just simply "The H Man".

Needless to say, he never lived it down.
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/25/2004 10:22 AM (CST)
Ricky,

that's what you call an interesting story for a nickname. Having loved to play baseball I only have one question...did he sit on the bench that game or the porta-pottie next to the baseball field?

So what nickname did they call you Ricky?
 

Posted by: Ricky Accepted Answer
11/25/2004 11:22 AM (CST)
Hi Deremiah,
I had a million nicknames and I've banished most of them from my memory because they were just tooooo evil. I was the tallest child in my class and I was the Italian. You know how kids are. The one that stuck the most was Fruitloops in Elementary school and Rico Suave in highschool and college (remember that horrible song?!).

Hope you're having a great Thanksgiving :)
 

Posted by: Michele Accepted Answer
11/25/2004 12:40 PM (CST)
My brother must have the best nickname of all - flumonion. The originations have something to do with surfing.

I have been called Shell, Mich and Shells. None of them have stuck.

My son calls me "me-ma'.

The best I ever heard was someone talking about feeling hard done by after a negative interaction with me - they said they had been 'Sohn burnt'.

Michele
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/25/2004 1:56 PM (CST)
Ricky & Michelle,

I hope you and all of our KHE friends are having a great time this Giving Thanks day. Thanks for giving your nick names. I know how embarrassing giving people your childhood nick names feels. So It's great hearing people pop their friends or ex-boyfriends or girlfriends names off first. You kinda sorta get the drift of who might really rather avoid commenting about it all together but reading the other post makes you laugh and think it's okay to be laughed at.

I've had dozens too. I think one of my most revered nick-names was "Sweetness" and it came from Chicago Bears "Papa Bear" Hallas grandson Brian McCaskey. When Brian use to rap my ankles before a game he would remind me that I reminded him of Walter. What's even great is that he commissioned me to do a drawing of Walter. So as you can see some nick names we hate and others we will never be able to live up to in a life time...If I could have only really ran the football like Walter...my, my, my...where would I be today...(a dream) please don't wake me up.

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE
but this is the nick name I love the most...(Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: Mushfique Manzoor Accepted Answer
11/27/2004 2:10 AM (CST)
hi deremiah

In my culture everyperson is given a nickname by the family/parents when they fix the full name of the child after birth.

myself being no exception, my nickname is TANMOY. its a Bengali word (my mother tongue is Bengali) which means "Engrossed into Something".

Till today my family memebers and most of my friends call me by that name rather than my first name Mushfique, which is mostly used in office and official matters.

cheers!!
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/27/2004 2:33 AM (CST)
Mushfique,

Now you have brought us down a new road into an interesting place with nick names. A nickname that is given after birth is most definitely unique. Thanks for sharing your nickname with us and for giving us the meaning of your nickname too.

In America it appears that our nick names draw more concern for "what does that mean" than our first names. But some of us have found that our first name has a very important and valuable meaning. This can really add to your lifes purpose when a name influences your behavior. Thanks again.

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: jose04 Accepted Answer
11/27/2004 1:02 PM (CST)
He Deremiah

My nickname stuck for about 2 years in school. I was the cause for the word itself.

WHen i was woken up from my daydreaming, in a Hindi language class (which i never understood), by my teachers question 'What is meant by 'Teek hai'?

As I was looking up the ceiling at that time, and i had noted the wood (made of teak), It seemed a handy source for an answer. 'Teek' and 'Teak' rhymed, and looking at the ceiling and then the teacher, i told him...'Teak wood', pointing to the ceiling. My classmates enjoyed this, and there was much mirth and fun...but the fact is that i was not joking...I was actually serious about my answer. This happens, i suppose always, when one gets a nickname...

i didn't deserve it ... but it stuck....for at least two years.

'Teek hai' in Hindi actually means 'Its okay'.

I am called a 'doctor' too deremiah, because of my interest in medicine and its ways. My house is full of medic books. I treat everybody who needs help..and its free..,Its the harmless homeopathy and naturopathy.

My father in law, once, jocularly remarked about me gettting behind bars ( he is a lawyer) for quackery, until he was given an acupressure therapy on the small finger of his hand, when he fainted...I remember, he jumped up in seconds...and hence forth he seemed to have more respect for my meanderings in medicine...no more quippings after that....
actually my wife did the therapy then,...she is an avid follower too, of medicine...particularly the alternative stuff. The 'doc' nickname is also my contribution....i tend to volunteer to help and it gets noted..

Actually i wrote a 916 words reply to your question, but modified it to make it short.

Thanks Deremiah, you have touched the chord again for the KHE...keep it going....

Can i ask you this...what can i, do for you...?
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/27/2004 2:03 PM (CST)
jose04,

Great post and quite an interesting short lived nick name you had. Thanks for sharing.


Jose04> what can I do for you?

Well Jose you're the first person to ask me that question therefore you deserve a GREAT reward (it takes a wise person to see that what people communicate with passion or love toward others is also an inner relfection of what motivates them).

Thanks Jose04 and I thought you would never ask...So here's what you can do for me:

Tell others of my Passion to "Make People Happy"

Email me your address so I can send you a GREAT reward...a Free Gift ( I love giving people good gifts...it's so wonderful because you feel good and I feel good & giving away "Good Feelings" is a good feeling)

Refer me to your friends in India (give them my email address and tell them to communicate with me. I want to be their pen pals...I'll tell them first hand about my country, my projects and my life and they can do the same)

Come and visit me if you are ever in America

Invite me to come to your country and speak

Send me the entire 916 word post

Forward me a great book on business from your country

Tell your family I said hello and that they are so special to have a great person like you in their lives.

Well that's enough for now...My grandmother (God rest her soul) used to say...

"Never make them happy twice" and as a little boy I used to say grandmother what does that mean? and she would reply..."Never make them happy to see you come and happy to see you go". In other words never extend your visit beyond what makes people happy to see you leave. Thanks Jose 04 Is there anything else I can do for you?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)


 

Posted by: turqiz Accepted Answer
11/27/2004 3:02 PM (CST)
Hi
The funniest nick name I've heard was when I was in my early twenties, there was a famous party organizer known by the name of "Get Out". The story on him was that he was so very ugly looking, that he was thrown out of every party he tried to enter. Well, this person did not give up and began organizing big parties by himself, which turned out to be a great success and got him excepted socially, but the name stuck on him for years!

I was called Giraffe, because I'm tall and freckled.

Also, my last name before I got married was PAZ, and when I was working as an international congress coordinator, there was a very sweet Japanese heart surgeon who always called me Ms. PUZZLE, because "you puzzle me with your beauty", so he said. This is always nice to remember... Thanks for making me bring up such sweet nostalgia...
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/27/2004 3:32 PM (CST)
Turqiz,

what a funny story but I'm sure quite challenging for the party organizer. It's definitely a story that shows that you can make even an ugly situation work beautifully for you. Your nick names are also quite cute. Thanks for participating and Shalome. Turqiz is there anything I can do for you?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)

PS

HOW I GOT MY NAME & WHAT IT MEANS...
I've never told this one but since we are talking about names I'll sidebar a little about how I acquired my name Deremiah. my fathers name is Jeremiah and his middle name is Mills and the story goes that my mother who was also endowed with a great deal of creative ability decided to name me in part after the great movie producer "Cecil B. Demills" so she gave me the middle name "DeMills" after the wonderful movie producer and decided to change the "J" in my fathers first name (which is a Jewish name meaning "The Lord does exalt") to the letter "D" in order to make my name flow together. So she named me "Deremiah DeMills". "Deremiah" means "The Lord does succeed". So that's how I got my first and middle name. I often tell people in the Torah it says that "God told the prophet Jeremiah that he was going to do a new thing"...and I tell people "I'm the new thing". Well now you know how I got my name and what it means. Thanks everyone for also doing a new thing with me..."Sharing your nick names". You all are the greatest. I just don't know what I would do without my wonderful friends...Hey where's Jett and Jbtron I just know they've got a nick name story or two.

 

Posted by: SRyan ;] Accepted Answer
11/28/2004 2:00 AM (CST)
I heard a story about a less-than-educated person who named her daughter after something she saw in the newspaper, just because she liked the sound of it.

Formica Dinette.
 

Posted by: Val (Moderator)* Accepted Answer
11/28/2004 3:10 AM (CST)
Hiya Deremiah. Taking a quick break from closing old questions to reminisce with the gang here.

I've had lots of nicknames. My favorite was Javaval (pronounced like Ja-VA-vul) - but really it came from java+val since I'm a serious coffee drinker. Back in my corporate days, I always had a cup in hand for every meeting ... and boy were there a lot of meetings.

In fact, now that I think about it, I'll bet I can trace my dependence on coffee back to those meetings. I hate to be cold, and the conference rooms were freezing. So I HAD to bring the coffee with me to stay warm. :)

Val
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/28/2004 5:30 PM (CST)
Hey Shelley, how exciting...

Now that just out did the one I was about to tell where a mother named her son after some mustard. What makes it even more interesting was that she was not even aware of the fact that there was a mustard called "Dijon". She should have invited me to name the other two kids she had...I would have named the one "Baloney" and the other "Cheese".

Val,

Thanks for taking a break from your mad 100 hour a week job. What are you going for a marathon these days. Also thanks for letting us know your nick name too. I think they just should have called you something more romantic like "Coffee & Cream".

Is there anything else I can do for you "Sugar"?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: Ricky Accepted Answer
11/29/2004 5:48 AM (CST)
Deremiah and Shelley,
I hate to out-do both of you, but what about this real name (true story, I'm not making this up):
My friend used to teach a child who's name was pronounced "shatheed" and spelled . . . Shithead.

Makes me feel sooo much better about my name and nicknames!

Take care Deremiah. Thanks for the fun question and your amazing participation in this forum!
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/29/2004 11:36 AM (CST)
Ricky,

I think you deserve the craziest nick name of the century award. Your story is almost too unbelieveable to be true. It's really quite interesting to see how even a fairly mediocre nick name looks great compared to that last one. As you can see people can make up a many of good excuses to give a bad nick name. Is there anything else I can dod for you?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)

PS this is your second post Ricky you are tied with Shelley.
 

Posted by: kwinters* Accepted Answer
11/29/2004 2:26 PM (CST)
D,
I was called 'Pickles' because one night at the bowling alley we had been drinking (pre-21) and I rubbed a dill pickle on my clothes to cover the smell of the alcohol because the police showed up....

I was also called romance in high school because I gave a girl a red rose....

I am called caveman because somehow it sounds like Kevin...

I am called Kevlar at work....10X tougher than steel....

I had a friend called 'Boner'...well you can guess....

hope it is good enough for points....
 

Posted by: SRyan ;] Accepted Answer
11/29/2004 3:44 PM (CST)
Ricky, I've heard an urban legend about that name, but it was pronounced sha-TAY-ud. Must be a different kid. ;]

Then there was the one named or-AHN-zhell-oh... derived from Orange Jello.

Kevlar, have you forgotten about King Winters? Deremiah knighted you way-back-when with his own nickname. (I think my D-given name must be She's Pretty Smart.)

- Shelley ;]
 

Posted by: cetty Accepted Answer
11/30/2004 8:28 AM (CST)
Hi!

'Cettina Travolta': I loved Saturday Night Fever as a teenager.

'Maria de la Celia': I'm mexican so there had to be a Maria somewhere in it!

'All purpose interface': I am brilliant with gadgets & lost instruction booklets.

'Cettyuschka': for a Russian friend

'CettyClaus': for my nieces as they get lots of presents

'Bumpy': does it need explanation?

'Cuddly-Cat': when I was a child I loved to go up to grown-ups and give them cuddles... so it sort of stuck (the nickname, not the habit!!)

'Cetoncia', 'Cetibirin', 'Ceto' and many other variations

Nothing spectacular... but not common either!

cetty
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/30/2004 9:40 AM (CST)
Cetty,

Girl you deserve an award and I think you should get it...the "Willingness to post the longest list of Nick names" Award.

I'm just wondering how many more nick names you kept hidden in your purse. Come on Cetty cough them up...I know you just have to have a couple more somewhere. Thanks for getting involved and not being afraid to share but come on Bumpy: does it need explanation? Sure it does...

All the nick names sometimes joggs the mind and now I remember a nick name that I use to wear on the back of my baseball warm up jersey...imprinted on a white shirt with sky blue sleeves I had imprinted by a printer in Bold Black the words...

"THE KID",

so there's another one. You can't mess with "THE KID" was often the phrase my baseball friends used. As Stevey Wonder was once quoted in a song "I wish those days would come back once more why did those days ever have to go...I love them so"

Thanks KHE I LOve you all. Is there anything else I can do for you.

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist"
 

Posted by: bjones1983* Accepted Answer
11/30/2004 9:02 PM (CST)
I've told friends throughout the years of some the nicknames of the kids I grew up with in Georgia.

Eggy-Baby - I don't know but can only think he was a smelly infant.

Duck-Booty - actually walked like a duck

and there was Herm Monster, Snoopy, Cake Mouth, Captain Caveman and Quickdraw.

Thanks,

barry
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
11/30/2004 10:24 PM (CST)
Barry, (Great job)...but what's yours???????

Welcome aboard KHE. You get the "First Post" award because I noticed that this is the first question that you answered and I think that's terrific...but.....you did not tell us your nick name. Now your friends nick names are truly "peachy"----but what was yours???----and don't give me nothing nice either or else I'll have to try and contact your old friends to get the real deal...(lol)...and after they see that you gave them all up for some of nuthin' you'll be in hot water and they'll give up all of your nick names...Is there anything I can do for you?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: jose04 Member Response
12/1/2004 7:34 AM (CST)
Deremiah

I was still hoping this post will be around and here it is.
Many many thanks for your kind words. Permit me to not include the 916 word writeup here as its too serious and might spoil the momentum and fun generated already. I'll anyway post it to you separately, since you asked,..thank you.

Fantastic participation by you in this post. KIP....!

Jose
 

Posted by: simy Accepted Answer
12/1/2004 2:16 PM (CST)
Hi

My nickname was "Zing" because I was the smallest...no the tiniest person going to school and I was always running.

The craziest nickname was "Soak ah Rat" a boy in my class used to come to school looking like he was drenched in water...but was dry... go figure...

LOL...I still laugh to this day because he still looks the same way...


Simy
 

Posted by: michelletrex Accepted Answer
12/1/2004 10:16 PM (CST)
There was a guy in my neighbourhood called Wayne Bruce his nickname was Man Bat.
Michelle
 

Posted by: ASVP/ChrisB Accepted Answer
12/2/2004 9:13 AM (CST)
Because of my last name I was given nicknames that would be not just racist, but legally actionable in most countries.

It's OK though, I got over it... with therapy...

A few years ago I was checking into a New York hotel, late at night.

"Name?", said the sombre, large african-american desk clerk.

"Blackman." I replied. His eyes widened. I put my card down on the counter. He picked it up, and laughed his head off. "I thought you were playing tricks on me man!" he said. "But you're almost as much a blackman as me!"

I scored an upgrade! He was a cool brother.

 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
12/2/2004 10:00 PM (CST)
Jose 04, sure send me the response on my email. Thanks.

Simy, You might have been the littlest thing but you were not the rattiest.

Michelletrex, you might have had a friend named man bat but where did your nickname fit into that batman timeline? Come on Michelletrex I could imagine a few for you but nothings better than the people with the nickname coughing it up. Well, come on Michelletrex.

Chris B, I kinda..a...figured you probably get a lot of those kinda word plays. Thanks for sharing your input on the nick name game. I think it will be time for me to do the nick name rapp. Thanks Chris you deserve the "BoldMan" award. Is there anything I can do for the four of you?

Your Servant, Deremiah, *CPE (Customer Passion Evangelist)
 

Posted by: Deremiah *CPE Author Response
12/7/2004 2:35 PM (CST)
Even good questions come to an end. It's been an exciting time with all my KHE friends. Keep on pushing.

Your Servant,

Deremiah, *CPE

PS
Customer Passion is still in Fashion
 

Posted by: michelletrex Member Response
12/7/2004 4:28 PM (CST)
Ohh Deremiah you closed the question! and me about to tell all about my nickname.. It rhymed with body part...
Oops out of time!
Michelletrex
 



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