What constitutes a junior, does the son have to have the same first, middle and last name. What if the son does not have a middle name but the father does. Or just the first and last name must be the same.
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Being a junior maybe
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Re: Being a junior maybe
Perhaps, in a technical sense, they should be the same. However, I base my use on the family's usage. I only use Jr. or III or such if the person and his family did that. There is likely a proper book answer. Someone else can speak to that.Bob White, Mac Nut Since 1985, Reunion Nut Since 1991
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Re: Being a junior maybe
Originally posted by Bob White View PostPerhaps, in a technical sense, they should be the same. However, I base my use on the family's usage. I only use Jr. or III or such if the person and his family did that. There is likely a proper book answer. Someone else can speak to that.
Which basically boils down to: you can't infer anything with certainty from the fact that two people were called Sr. & Jr. Father & son is a good first guess, but would need confirmation.Dennis J. Cunniff
Click here to email me
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Re: Being a junior maybe
Originally posted by R Fletcher View PostWhat constitutes a junior, does the son have to have the same first, middle and last name. What if the son does not have a middle name but the father does. Or just the first and last name must be the same.Jan Powell
in Wellington, New Zealand
http://www.rellyseeker.nz/
--
Apple/Mac since 1987, Reunion since 1993
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Re: Being a junior maybe
Originally posted by Bob White View PostThere is likely a proper book answer. Someone else can speak to that.
If a man shares a name with his father (the exact same name), he is 'junior' and his father becomes .senior'. If a man shares the exact same name with any relative OTHER than his father, he becomes 'the second' (II). Subsequent males in the family who share the name become 'the third', 'the fourth', etc.
It is also common to call others with similar names Jr and Sr to distinguish them. For example, John Robert Smith may be known as John Sr to distinguish him from his son, John Harold Smith, who may be called John Jr. They may also informally be called 'Big John' and 'Little John', but this goes against rules of etiquette.
You may wonder why I know these obscure facts. It is because my brother shares his name with my father. My mother strongly disliked the use of 'Junior' as a name, so my brother became 'II'. I believe it is that way on his birth certificate. Informally they were called 'big' and 'little'.Last edited by Kim; 19 October 2016, 12:45 PM.Researching DEBEE, FRERICHS/FREDERICKS, HAHNENENKAMP, JANCO, KOLK, PETRINI, WEISS
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Re: Being a junior maybe
Originally posted by Kim View PostActually, there IS a proper book answer and has been for many years. It's been around at least as long as Emily Post started giving etiquette lessons. Basically it goes like this....
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