What's in a name.

  • Thread starter Thread starter Deleted member 35927
  • Start date Start date
Royal families do that a lot, so I don't see a problem with it for the rest of us.

Although a precedent was set recently. House of Windsor or Mountbatten Windsor should have changed to the male name. That is what always happened before.
Prince Philip was from the Oldenburg Royal House of Greece and Denmark, but he had dropped that and chose Mountbatten.
The Mountbatten family had changed to that when they dropped Battenberg.
So our present King could have been Oldenburg, Mountbatten or Battenberg, from his father's line, but he decided to remain Mountbatten-Windsor.
Windsor was chosen when the Royal family decided to drop Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.

Mrs V and I did not change either of our surnames when we got married.
Some people seem to have great difficulty accepting that.
eg: "Oh, I thought you were married."
"We are."
"But how can I call you Mr and Mrs xxx?"
"You can't. You have to call us Mr xxx and Mrs yyy, because those are our names, the ones we've always had."
He couldn't be a Battenberg because he's a fruitcake ?. :)
 
My school physics teacher…James Riddle; guy I used to work with…Richard Head; and another one…R Searle; and of course the St Mirren player at uni same time as me…Phil McAveety.

Girls seem to get away lightly on the naming front.
 
My name was because (as a prior lowish teen player) I again became a Rabbit golfer (19+) before I signed on here, but got back to lower than 18 again when I registered.

I am now a Rabbit again - and by quite a few shots after WHS and injuries - 23+

This year I will try to get back to be a Tiger golfer again (18 or less).
 
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