I have been seeing that on name forums, TTC and a few other places. If you are going to call a kid Jack but his name is John why not just name him Jack? And where do you get Jack from John.
Becca for Rebecca I get, Jon for Jonathan I get, Steve for Steven I get but Jack for John...not so much.
Re: How is Jack a nickname for John?
I don't know.
Same way that Bill is a nickname for William.
And *** is a nickname for Richard.
Jack is a traditional nickname for John. Just like Bill is a traditional nickname for William.
I personally prefer John as a formal name and Jack as a nickname. Jack alone sounds very informal to me.
I think that is an older generation thing. That's my mom's cousin's name. John - after his dad... but they called him Jack.
goes with Peggy being short for Margaret (I never got that one either)
TTC#1 Chart
TTC#2 Chart
IUI #1 - #4 (repronex trigger) = BFN
IUI#5 on 10/28/2008 ** BFP 11/10/08 ** EDD 07/21/09 *** It's a GIRL (07/14/09)
med/treatment free BFP 06/28/10. EDD 03/05/11 *** GIRL #2 (02/23/11)
beta#1 @ 17dpo = 1296 .... beta#2 @ 19dpo = 3034
it's the Bug and Baby Belle!
Wow, I have never heard that Jack was a nickname for Jonathan. New to me.
We call my cousin Jack and he's John Jr. I don't know how it started. We also call another cousin Butchie and he's Walter Jr.!
I never understood this either! Here's an article on how certain names become nicknames for others.
https://www.associatedcontent.com/article/513387/nicknames_how_john_became_jack_and.html?cat=37
I really think they need to unblock d.ick. It's a person's name.
Immature.
i have never understood that.
same with Bill for William.
and Hank for Henry.
i agree. i tried to type out the name of the store that is d.ick, and it ****-ed it once.
my grandpa's name is ***.
LOL!
Haha, well at least I am not alone.
I get that it's traditional but WHY.
We have a John who is Jack and a William Jr that is Butchie!
No clue. My great aunt is called Sally, which is a nickname for Sarah. Then there's Peggy for Margaret, Betty for Elizabeth, Hank for Henry, Chuck for Charles... a lot of those traditional NNs don't take much from the original name!