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MY husbands aunt is what to our daughter and son? Is there a name for that?
Latest comment: 16 years ago2 comments2 people in discussion
I'm going to be an aunty soon but im not even 15.What could I be called except from Aunt or Aunty? — This comment was unsigned.
Whatever you want! My first thoughts are perhaps just your name, or if you (or your future neice/nephew's parents (presumably your sibling and their partner)) want something a bit more, perhaps you can use a word from another language you like the sound of.
Something's wrong. Can anybody hear us? :) The pronunciations and the rhymes are chenged. I would correct it, but i don't know which one belongs to which dialect. My dictionary says American is the one pronounced with /æ/, and British is with /ɑ/. Doesn't write anything about other dialects. Ferike33315:52, 22 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
In American English, aunt (the woman) and ant (the insect) are pronounced alike by the majority of speakers: . However, it seems that most black Americans pronounce aunt as . I have noticed recently that some younger white Americans are now pronouncing it as well, but still predominates. In Britain, the RP is . —Stephen16:28, 22 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
Thank you very much. I've done it. The only thing I can't are the audio files. I can't listen to them so I don'T know which belongs where. Sincererly, Ferike33318:21, 22 June 2009 (UTC)Reply
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RFV of two senses: "(informal) A great-aunt / grandaunt." and "A grandmother. (More often "auntie".)" Not to be confused with the more general sense 4, "An affectionate term for a woman of an older generation than oneself, especially a friend of one's parents, by means of fictive kin." - -sche(discuss)22:29, 31 January 2016 (UTC)Reply
Could be worded better, but there's no doubt that "aunt" is used of grandaunts (with any number of "greats"), as for that matter is "uncle" of granduncles; and that friends (often cousins) of one's parents are also called "aunt" and "uncle". Documenting it may take some work, but I think this is pretty well-established. Not sure about use of "aunt" for "grandmother", although I know that "grandmother" and "grandfather" are sometimes applied to elderly persons without any actual relationship.P Aculeius (talk) 22:42, 31 January 2016 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, misread that part as an RFV of sense 4 as well as sense 2. However, the words aunt and uncle are regularly applied to all aunts and uncles, not merely the siblings of one's parents, but also their aunts and uncles, one's grandparents' aunts and uncles, etc. Terms such as "great aunt" and "grandaunt" or "great-grandaunt" are typically trotted out only when there's some ambiguity. You address your grandmother's aunt Mabel as "Aunt Mabel," not "Great-Grandaunt Mabel." P Aculeius (talk) 23:07, 31 January 2016 (UTC)Reply