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Whats in a name?

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By *uckscouple2007 OP   Couple
over a year ago

Bucks

Appreciate that most names originate from an age well before the words became slang in our fair language ... but the surname of a new client at work got me chuckling ...

Mr Cockram

Wonder what the origins of that name are

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By (user no longer on site)
Forum Mod

over a year ago

Many years ago the Cockrams were just that.....Cockrammers,its an old farming term

If you believe that you'll believe anything

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

O.E. cocc, O.Fr. coq, O.N. kokkr, all of echoic origin. O.E. cocc was a nickname for "one who strutted like a cock," thus a common term in the Middle Ages for a pert boy, used of scullions, apprentices, servants, etc. A common personal name till c.1500, it was affixed to Christian names as a pet diminutive, cf. Wilcox, Hitchcock, etc. Slang sense of "penis" is attested since 1618 (but cf. pillicock "penis," from c.1300); cock-teaser is from 1891. A cocker spaniel (1823) was trained to start woodcocks. Cock-and-bull is first recorded 1621, perhaps an allusion to Aesop's fables, with their incredible talking animals, or to a particular story, now forgotten. French has parallel expression coq-à-l'âne

- not sure where the rang came from - have to say we love etymology. But the best ever name we cam across was someone in the hong kong office called fanny pong - no lie.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

I was thinking about that only yesterday when watching the news. They ran an item about the Iraqw War Inquiry and lo and behold, Chief of the Defence, Sir Jock Stirrup was giving evidence at the inquiry.

How the fook do you get a name like that! I know his full name is Eric Graham Stirrup but you gotta have one helluva s.o.h. to put up with, and even endorse, a nickname like Jock Stirrup!

Now say his name really fast and it comes out as Sir Jockstrap!

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

I lady called Penny Niss....she didnt like to sign for things...P Niss

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By *etillanteWoman
over a year ago

.

This unusual and interesting name is of Anglo-Saxon origin, and is a locational surname deriving from the place called "Cockerham" south of Lancaster in Lancashire. The place is recorded as "Cocreham" in the Domesday Book of 1086, and as "Kokerham" in the Cockersand Abbey Chartulary of 1190, and is named from the River Cocker on which it stands, with the Old English pre 7th Century "ham", homestead, settlement. The river name is an ancient one, deriving from the Old British (pre-Roman) word "kukro", meaning "crooked, winding", which is similar to the early Irish (Gaelic) word "cucar", crooked, awkward. Locational names were usually given to the lord of the manor, and especially to those former inhabitants who moved to another area, and were best identified by the name of their birthplace. The modern surname can be found as Cockerham, Cockram (around Bristol), Cockrem, Cockran and Cockren. The marriage of Richard Cockerham and Anne Puller was recorded at Warton, Lancashire, on October 15th 1620. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of John de Kokerham, which was dated 1349, in the "Register of the Freemen of the City of York", Yorkshire, during the reign of King Edward 111, known as "The Father of the Navy", 1327 - 1377. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

© Copyright: Name Orgin Research

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

There is a black guy in Walsall, think he used to be a boxer, and his name is Elvis Parsley. And what about that couple of jokers who called their son Russell Sprout

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By *ugby 123Couple
Forum Mod

over a year ago

O o O oo

I knew a man once called Jimmy Riddle

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By *heekychezzaWoman
over a year ago

warrington


"I knew a man once called Jimmy Riddle "

Wow...I still know a guy called that...hee hee

The worse I've come across was a newspaper story back in the seventies....where a couple had named their son Thomas Diccon.....and their surname was Harry

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By *ugby 123Couple
Forum Mod

over a year ago

O o O oo

ooooooo I wonder if it is the same Jimmy Riddle !

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