Brock Turnpike wrote: » Good morning. How do you all feel about this? A friend of mine once asked a good friend of his, whom he one prior to working with him, to call him by his full name in work. Is this acceptable? Should I start asking work colleagues/friends to call me Brockleton in professional environs?
Guill wrote: » Are we talking Lawfirm or McDonalds?
Stevieluvsye wrote: » Bit early for the drugs IMHO
Cornelius Crow wrote: » I’ve a colleague who took to calling me by a diminutive and in their accent it made it sound like a Fair City character so that had to stop immediately. There’s another different shortened version that I’m quite happy to be called in work though, I even told a patient to call me by it to differentiate from her daughter who had the same name as me.What boils my piss though is either in real life or here on boards when people take it upon themselves to address you simply by the first letter of your name in a cloyingly matey way. It’s hideously over-familiar and I wish people wouldn’t do it. Then again it’s a fairly immediate way of someone demonstrating that they’re a bit of a knob so perhaps it’s best to know that at the earliest opportunity.
Cornelius Crow wrote: » I’ve a colleague who took to calling me by a diminutive and in their accent it made it sound like a Fair City character so that had to stop immediately. There’s another different shortened version that I’m quite happy to be called in work though, I even told a patient to call me by it to differentiate from her daughter who had the same name as me. What boils my piss though is either in real life or here on boards when people take it upon themselves to address you simply by the first letter of your name in a cloyingly matey way. It’s hideously over-familiar and I wish people wouldn’t do it. Then again it’s a fairly immediate way of someone demonstrating that they’re a bit of a knob so perhaps it’s best to know that at the earliest opportunity.
branie2 wrote: » If a person is in the medical field, I call him or her doctor or nurse
Stevieluvsye wrote: » What about a Dentist? There's one for ye
brevity wrote: » Yea, don’t shorten people’s names without prior permission. It’s Anthony not Anto, Andrew not Andy, Vincent not Vince etc... It’s really annoying imo and then when you correct the person you come of looking worse. Edit: username does not check out!
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » You don’t use “nicknames” in a professional setting, unless, maybe, you’re doing it in a “jovial” fashion with someone you have a good, working, relationship with.
Stevieluvsye wrote: » True, i only call Derek "Rasher" at lunch time.
BDI wrote: » You come off looking worse because you can’t handle not having control. You think there is some sort of onemanupship based on what people shorten your name to or because everyone else is an idiot.
EmmetSpiceland wrote: » Why is he called “Rasher”?
mariaalice wrote: » So you are addressing them as say..Bartholomew in work but if you met him in the pub he is Bart? were you not tempted to laugh when they asked you this?