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-   -   Nicknames that bite you in the ass (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=24156)

monster 12-10-2010 09:15 AM

Nicknames that bite you in the ass
 
I often use abbreviations/nicknames for people when making interim notes for the fundraiser I do. Sometimes I slip up and write them in the presence of the people I use the abbreviations for. So far I've been lucky, and Roger Rat didn't seem to mind so much about his -after all it's just a truncation. But I wonder how much of a nasty suprise Buttsecks will be for the lucky owner of that nom de plume (Buczek)? Especially as she's a grandma :lol: There is a buttsecks order due at the school today. :eek: :lol:

Shawnee123 12-10-2010 09:50 AM

I'm kind of sure Hamster Head heard me once (well, she had a lump of bangs left over from the eighties sitting in the middle of her noggin/forehead and it looked like a stupid hamster sitting there.)

Red-headed Pecker surely heard us call him that.

The Supply Nazi at my old job probably knew I called her that: my stupid boss at the time forwarded an email to her where I stopped short of calling her The Supply Nazi.

footfootfoot 12-10-2010 11:48 AM

I had an American housemate who wrote in Chinese characters and Japanese Kanji when she wanted to write private memos to herself. I never found out what they were, didn't really ask.

At a bike shop I once worked at we often had to repair flying pieces of crap that should have been junked but the folks who owned them couldn't afford to buy a new bike. Usually they were sensitive and emotional about their bikes for a variety of reasons. When one of those kevorkian bikes would come in, the mechanic doing triage would write on the repair slip MSR (make shit run) Once, a sharp eyed customer noted that the mechanic wrote MSR and not "tune up" as she had requested. I was a few feet away watching his face freeze and go sort of white while his cpu clocked 100%.

"Umm, it's a note... to let the mechanic... who... works on the bike... to Make Sure it Runs."
She seemed satisfied if a little suspicious.

I've blotted out the really embarrassing ones.

Scriveyn 12-10-2010 12:21 PM

Nothing offensive, but it was fun: Our IT manager, let's call him Ted Smith, was referred to as "Felix" by all employees. A use that leaked out to business partners. So, inevitably, at some point business post started arriving addressed to Felix Smith. Which made him wonder :p:

jimhelm 12-10-2010 12:36 PM

Duke once overheard me refer to him as Dr Evil. He was offended.

zippyt 12-10-2010 01:13 PM

my last name is Cockerham , need I say More ??

Happy Monkey 12-10-2010 02:53 PM

Ham please.

bluecuracao 12-10-2010 04:30 PM

I'd recently let some of my fellow condo residents know that I refer to the downstairs restaurant owner as Jabba the Chef. They laughed without me having to explain, because he is exactly like Jabba the Hutt from Star Wars. Almost everyone in our building despises him, and he despises us right back of course.

It's probably only a matter of time now before he finds out what his nickname is, and tries to inflict shady intimidation tactics on me in typical Hutt crime lord fashion.

zippyt 12-10-2010 04:35 PM

Ham please.

See its Too easy

Shawnee123 12-11-2010 12:00 PM

Last night I stopped at my club, and my friend Kevin yells to me "Hey, the Bickersons just left."

The Bickersons is a nickname I gave to my dear friends, a married couple (it's no secret they argue a LOT, they know it, I know it, everyone knows it.) It's one of those funny yet "fond" nicknames that I hadn't really planned to take on a life of its own.

I was like "Geez, Kevin, HUSH."

:lol:

HungLikeJesus 12-11-2010 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by zippyt (Post 699406)
my last name is Cockerham , need I say More ??

Be careful not to get your Cockerham caught in your Zippyt.

Sundae 12-11-2010 01:59 PM

I've not (yet) been caught out with a mean nickname.
But I have often instigated new names for people I work with.

For example I once worked with a lady called Leisha.
She had a cloud of frizzy red hair.
Many year before, there was a programme on TV about a redhead called Marmalade Atkins, so I secretly called her Marmaleisha. Which worked really well. And it progressed into The Lady Marmaleisha (as per Lady Marmalade).

It suited her so well that eventually too many people knew, and she became aware of it. She didn't like it an awful lot, but I don't recall it was ever traced to me. And it suited her anyway.

Shawnee123 12-11-2010 02:35 PM

(Sung to the tune of Mona Lisa by Nat King Cole)

Marmaleisha, Marmaleisha
Sundae named you...

Sundae 12-11-2010 03:01 PM

I likey :)

Carruthers 12-11-2010 04:08 PM

1 Attachment(s)
A neighbour works in the pharmaceutical industry and soon acquired the nickname 'Denzil'. I named him after the character from the Fast Show, Professor Denzil Dexter of the University of Southern California. The good Professor's experiments were always pointless but usually 'chemically assisted'. I have, on more than one occasion, nearly called the neighbour Denzil. It's only a matter of time...

The son had 'little sod' written all over him and soon acquired the soubriquet 'Damian' for reasons that will need no explanation.
He also appears to have developed an interest in 'pharmaceuticals' and has a suitably eclectic social circle.

Professor Dexter...


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