Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
If Patrick now has a son, his son is Patrick Jr. (or Patrick III; alternatively, Patrick II if Randall did not have a son named Patrick II). As time passes, the III suffix goes to the son of either Patrick Jr. or Patrick II, whoever is first to have a son named Patrick. This is one way it is possible and correct for a Junior to father a IV.
Fitz – (Irish, from Norman French) "son of", from Latin " filius" meaning "son" (mistakenly thought to mean illegitimate son, because of its use for certain illegitimate sons of English kings) [citation needed] i – "and", always in lowercase, used to identify both surnames (e.g. Antoni Gaudí i Cornet) [11]
Sometimes the "Jr." or "Sr." suffix is applied even when the child's legal name differs from that of the parent. One example is that of the singer Hiram King Williams, known professionally as Hank Williams, and his son Randall Hank Williams, known professionally as Hank Williams Jr. Daughters being named after their mothers using similar ...
Append a period, or not, (Jr. or Jr) according to the variety of English used by the article. When the surname is shown first, the suffix follows the given name, as Kennedy, John F. Jr. or Wright, Otis D. II. [m] When the given name is omitted, omit the suffix – Kennedy, not Kennedy Jr. – except where the context requires disambiguation. If ...
Dale Earnhardt Jr. (born 1974), American race car driver; Jim Gilliam (1928–1978), American Major League Baseball and Negro league player and coach; Junior Giscombe (born 1957), British singer-songwriter; Ken Griffey Jr. (born 1969), American Major League Baseball Hall-of-Fame player; Antonio Morales Barreto (1943–2014), Filipino-Spanish ...
RFK Jr. has four brothers and six sisters, meaning he splits family money with more siblings, whereas cousin Caroline Kennedy is the only living child of JFK. From his family money, he holds ...
Look up suffix's definition. A suffix changes the meaning of whatever it is joined to, and is a part of it. It is the same for words or names. For example, "smoke" and "smokeless" are two entirely different words despite being only visibly different due to a suffix. It is the same for a father and a son, separated visibly in print by the suffix ...
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. has expressed opposition to gender-affirming health care for transgender minors and questioned evidence linking HIV to AIDS, two issues that critics say should give senators ...