Ebook {Epub PDF} Hello My Name Is...: The Remarkable Story of Personal Names by Neil Burdess






















The Remarkable Story of Personal Names By (author) Neil Burdess. Hello, My Name Is looks at the fascinating subject of our personal names. Of course, we are particularly interested in our own names. Dale Carnegie, author of How to Win Friends and Influence People, says our name is our ‘sweetest and most important sound’. However, your name is just one in an ocean of names, many of which have a .  · | Hello My Name is The Remarkable Story of Personal Names by Neil Burdess is published by Sandstone Press, priced PS COPYRIGHT MGN Ltd. No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder. The Remarkable Story of Personal Names Neil Burdess Using examples from Anglo-Saxon kings to today’s celebrities, Hello, My Name Is charts the history and importance of personal names— given names, surnames, titles, and professional names.


According to Neil Burdess, author of new book Hello, My Name Is The Remarkable Story of Personal Names, we take more inspiration from rich parents that live nearby than celebrities when. Half a century ago there were only five such names: Kevin, Declan, Bridget, Deirdre and Eileen. Hello My Name Is: The Remarkable Story of Personal Names by Neil Burdess is published on November 3rd by Sandstone Press at £ Dr Neil Burdess, an Honorary Research Fellow in Deakin's Faculty of Arts and Education, has recently published a book, which traces the origins and the significance of names. Hello, My Name Is.


Neil Burdess is the author of Hello, My Name Is The Remarkable Story of Personal Names published by Sandstone Press on 3 November. Half a century ago there were only five such names: Kevin, Declan, Bridget, Deirdre and Eileen. Hello My Name Is: The Remarkable Story of Personal Names by Neil Burdess is published on November 3rd by Sandstone Press at £ The author's given name, Neil, is one he shares with the first man on the moon. He would like to claim that he was named in honour of Neil Armstrong, because he would then be 20 years younger. His surname, Burdess, is not a typo. The much more familiar Burgess is a different name. There are less than people with the surname Burdess in Britain, most living in northeast England, centred on the perhaps unfortunately named town of Crook, where the author was born.

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