ChatterBank0 min ago
Is there a word for it?
37 Answers
When someone's name suits the job they do? Like Mr Taylor, who is a tailor, or Mr Coates, who sells coats.
Do you know any that are not quite so obvious, where the link between the name and the occupation is a bit more tenuous?
Do you know any that are not quite so obvious, where the link between the name and the occupation is a bit more tenuous?
Answers
aptronym
http:// en. wikipedia. org/ wiki/ Aptronym
18:29 Fri 11th Nov 2011
How would you like this as a surname
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wanker_(surname)
If AB censors it the name is W*nk*r
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wanker_(surname)
If AB censors it the name is W*nk*r
>>>Army colleague whose surname was Sergeant.
In the book Catch 22 (a very funny anti-war novel) there is one guy whose surname is Major.
His father was so fond of the army he gave him a first name and middle name of Major Major, so his full name was Major Major Major.
Of course when he joined the army he became a major so he was Major Major Major Major.
http://en.wikipedia.o...jor_Major_Major_Major
In the book Catch 22 (a very funny anti-war novel) there is one guy whose surname is Major.
His father was so fond of the army he gave him a first name and middle name of Major Major, so his full name was Major Major Major.
Of course when he joined the army he became a major so he was Major Major Major Major.
http://en.wikipedia.o...jor_Major_Major_Major
-- answer removed --
Of course, many surnames were originally given BECAUSE of the trade of the person concerned. Thus, tailor, smith, fletcher, cooper and so on were apt descriptions rather than names, as such. The one thing anyone alive now with the surname Taylor can be sure of is that some ancestor of his/hers actually WAS a tailor. It's hardly surprising, therefore, that name and job often match nowadays, too.