Spanish name?

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Taurine

kiwifarms.net
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Feb 3, 2013
I wonder, why did he decide that he had a Spanish name and why is it Ricardo? I'm sure there's people in Mexico and Spain with the name Christian anyway...
 
Taurine said:
I wonder, why did he decide that he had a Spanish name and why is it Ricardo? I'm sure there's people in Mexico and Spain with the name Christian anyway...
In high school language classes (in my experience, anyway), you generally get to choose a name for whatever language you're learning.
 
Yeah, we had French names in my French class too.
"Ricardo" is presumably from Ricky Ricardo.
 
Marvin said:
Taurine said:
I wonder, why did he decide that he had a Spanish name and why is it Ricardo? I'm sure there's people in Mexico and Spain with the name Christian anyway...
In high school language classes (in my experience, anyway), you generally get to choose a name for whatever language you're learning.

That's the way I always read it, back when I studied German in primary school I was "Herman"

But I think Chris actually believes that his Spanish name is Ricardo in the same way his star sign is Aquarius if you know what I mean.

(edited cos I put his "escort name" down... Carlos)
 
If he was going to do a literal translation, it would be "Cristiano". Also it would be "Cristobal" for "Christopher". Usually they do that in HS language classes. (um,right?)
 
My experience is that one class we got to find the name that is our Spanish equivalent. If your first name had no equivalent then you did your middle name. And if that didn't have one then you picked one and explained why that one. People who already had Spanish names did the reverse. We never used them again.

As for Chris, either they allowed the students to pick their own, or Chris just picked Ricardo instead of the actual equivalent and the teacher let him get away with it because autism. He definitely had I Love Lucy in mind when he picked it thanks to his ancient parents, but it's weird that he's continued to make such a big deal about it well past high school.
 
Anchuent Christory said:
Marvin said:
Taurine said:
I wonder, why did he decide that he had a Spanish name and why is it Ricardo? I'm sure there's people in Mexico and Spain with the name Christian anyway...
In high school language classes (in my experience, anyway), you generally get to choose a name for whatever language you're learning.

That's the way I always read it, back when I studied German in primary school I was "Herman"
I took German and I was Hans-Rolf.

Anchuent Christory said:
But I think Chris actually believes that his Spanish name is Ricardo in the same way his star sign is Aquarius if you know what I mean.

(edited cos I put his "escort name" down... Carlos)
He loves tacking on new names to his name. What's it currently at, Christopher Christian "Ricardo" Weston Chandler?
 
MysticMisty said:
It's weird that he's continued to make such a big deal about it well past high school.

:lol: You can use this sentence for 90% of Chris' post high school life.

But going back to the names, we just picked one as they were read out to us. I took Herman Munster as my inspiration.
 
I took French and Spanish in school. I took the name Miguel (because my real name is Mike) in Spanish class and Jean-Luc (after the captain in Star Trek) in French. My name in French is Michel, which I don't like because it sounds too much like Michelle.

I also took a free, noncredit Chinese class in college for fun and had the Chinese equivalent of Michael (it sounds like "my kuh") in the class.

I sort of used my names in Spanish and French but my Chinese teacher (she was Taiwanese) almost always referred to me by my Chinese name.
 
Marvin said:
Anchuent Christory said:
Marvin said:
In high school language classes (in my experience, anyway), you generally get to choose a name for whatever language you're learning.

That's the way I always read it, back when I studied German in primary school I was "Herman"
I took German and I was Hans-Rolf.

Anchuent Christory said:
But I think Chris actually believes that his Spanish name is Ricardo in the same way his star sign is Aquarius if you know what I mean.

(edited cos I put his "escort name" down... Carlos)
He loves tacking on new names to his name. What's it currently at, Christopher Christian "Ricardo" Weston Chandler?

Um..."Christopher Christian Ricardo Weston Chandler Original Creator Of Sonichu And Rosechu And The City Of Cwciville IGNORE ALL GOOGLE RESULTS" I believe
 
Kosher Dill said:
Yeah, we had French names in my French class too.
"Ricardo" is presumably from Ricky Ricardo.

They do that in college courses too.

Aparently in Chinese my name becomes Gao Furui
 
Pikimon said:
Kosher Dill said:
Yeah, we had French names in my French class too.
"Ricardo" is presumably from Ricky Ricardo.

They do that in college courses too.

Aparently in Chinese my name becomes Gao Furui
Dear god, imagine how many names Chris would have if he had taken more language classes!
And since we are talking about names in langage classes, when I took Japanese I chose the name Haru Kanda. (we had to do full names)
 
Probably all of his foreign names would be the local variant of Christian. The only reason it wasn't the case with Spanish is because he's a fan of I Love Lucy and it introduced him to the only male Spanish name he knew.
 
I've never had to do that in any foreign language class that I've had. I don't understand the objective behind it.
 
Then again, the literal translation in Spanish would be Cristian, nobody uses Cristobal (Christopher) anymore.
 
Seahorses said:
I've never had to do that in any foreign language class that I've had. I don't understand the objective behind it.

The way my HS Spanish teacher thought, it was another way to have you use Spanish in everyday life (or at least in class). Kinda the immersion helps you learn faster thing. I was Ramone.
 
Good thing my High School teacher didn't deal with that nonsense. Then again most of my classmates were Spanish, anyway.
 
It was "Ricardo" because he had ancient parents who forced him to watch ancient television.

If "Red Skelton" could've been chosen as a Spanish class name he'd have chosen that.
 
Huh! I thought my language teacher was a tard when she gave us English names, but I never knew it was this common. Can't say that it made learning any easier for me, though.
 
Chris seems to need titles. I think his identity is shaped in a very concrete way, and has to be defined by words.
 
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