Talk:Albie Sinclair

Nicknames
Do we have a ruling for how nicknames should be integrated into the first line of the introduction? This page now has the first option, but previously had the second:


 * 1) Albert Sinclair, also known as "Albie" for short
 * 2) Albert "Albie" Sinclair

The prevailing format across the wiki seems to be #2 (see Ben Jackson, Liz Shaw, Jo Grant, Harry Sullivan, Peri Brown, Flip Jackson, Melanie Bush, Hex, Will Arrowsmith, Charlotte Pollard, Toshiko Sato, Amy Pond, Yasmin Khan, etc.), but T:CHAR NAMES indicates that #1 (see Mels Zucker, Charles Griffiths or Pete Tyler, all of which were changed relatively recently from #2 by Epsilon) is the ideal way.

Epsilon's edit summary for changing it on Charles Griffiths' page said that it was because "Charlie isn't a nickname, it's just a shorthand of Charles" and, on this page, that it should be #1 because Albie is a hypocorism and not a nickname. However, the above examples show that we don't make any distinction between the two.

To go on a tangent, if we look up the definition of a hypocorism, we get:


 * Collins Dictionary - "a pet name, esp one using a diminutive affix"
 * Definition of pet name: "A pet name is a special name that you use for a close friend or a member of your family instead of using their real name. Synonyms: nickname, term of endearment, affectionate name"
 * Definition of nickname: "A nickname is an informal name for someone or something"
 * Merriam-Webster - "a pet name"
 * Definition of pet name: "a name that a person uses for someone to show love or affection"
 * Definition of nickname: "a familiar form of a proper name (as of a person or a city)"

Let's consider better known examples than Albie. With Elizabeth Shaw, "Liz" isn't just a pet name (i.e. not a "special name" or one used "to show love or affection") because it's the name she uses to introduce herself to people and uses even in a professional context. Jo and Amy similarly introduce themselves as "Jo Grant" and "Amy Pond". It wouldn't be accurate, I don't think, to [edit: say "Amelia Pond, known as Amy for brevity" when she isn't known by that name just to save time.]

Even if we ignore all this, #2 is clearly the more widespread. I wouldn't necessarily be opposed to changing it, but as far as I can see, this is the way that we include such names here and, short of a discussion about it when we get the forums back and unless there's been a discussion that I'm unaware of and hasn't been implemented, the introduction to this page should return to reading Albert "Albie" Sinclair. Jack &#34;BtR&#34; Saxon ☎  15:37, 6 December 2022 (UTC)