A British Broadcasting
Corporation reporter and a business executive from England have written, nine
years apart, witty features on unique Filipino names that we take for granted
but stun foreigners.
“On my first day
in Manila, I…was served by a smiling coffee shop girl who wore a name badge:
BumBum,” Kate McGeown of BBC recalls. “I did a double-take. But if it’s
is a joke the whole country seems to be in.”
Matthew Sutherland
agreed in an Observer feature “The secretary I inherited on arrival had an
unusual name: Leck-Leck.” Filipinos, he discovered, were fond of “repeating
names.” They include: Lenlen or Ning-ning.
“Names are refined
by using the ‘squared’ symbol as in Len2 or Mai2,”
Sutherland wrote. “How boring to come from the UK, full of people named John
Smith. How wonderful to come to a country where imagination rules.”
The head of the
Catholic Church here then was named Jaime Cardinal Sin. “Welcome to the
house of Sin,” he’d greet guests. “Where else in the world could that have
happened but in the Philippines!”
Everyone here has
a nickname: Babes, Lovely, Precious; Honey Boy, Bing, and Dong. Even the former
chief of the National Police, and now Rehabilitation czar Panfilo
Lacson has a doorbell name: “Ping.”
“There are
millions of them,” gasped Sutherland. Such names are frequently used in
doorbell combinations like: Dingdong; and Bingbing. Others graduate into
“repeating names” like: Len-Len, Let-Let; Mai-mai or Petpet.
“How wonderful to
come from a country where imagination and exoticism rule,” Sutherland says.
“How boring to come from a country, like the U.K., full of people like John
Smith.”
“The President’s
full Christian name is Benigno Simeon Cojuangco Aquino,” McGeown weighed in.
“(These) names are Spanish, Hebrew and Chinese. His nickname, Noynoy, is the
only part that is truly Filipino.”
Former president
Joseph Estrada is commonly known as “Erap.” When spelt backwards, Erap becomes
“Pare.” That means mate in Aussie or buddy in Tagalog.
“No one questions
the integrity of Joker Arroyo, one of the country's most respected senators
(who has since retired),” McGeown wrote. “That is his real first name.
Apparently he got it because of his father's fondness for playing cards.
Joker's brother is called Jack.
Sutherland points
to another category: the “randomly-inserted letter “H” names. “It results in
creations like: Lhenn, Ghemma, Jhimmy or Jhun (Jhun2?). I think it
is designed to give a touch of class to an otherwise only averagely weird
name.”
Then, we have the
tendency to cluster names for children, like Jun, Joy, Joyce, Luzviminda
splices Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao. And Jejomar, of course, is not only the
vice-president; the name melds Jesus, Joseph and Mary. “They look great painted
on the trunk of the cab you hail.”
Why those unique
names?" McGeown asked Filipino friends. Soon a heated debate began. “They
agreed that, to outsiders at least, it all might sound a bit strange.” The
Philippines is a melting pot of different cultures.
The Spanish, in an
1849 decree, mandated everyone had to have a surname. That resulted in tens of
thousands of newly christened Marias and Joses.
So even today,
most surnames are Spanish. “With the Americans came names like Butch, Buffy and
Junior—and the propensity to shorten everything if at all possible.
The large
Filipino-Chinese community here is caught up in this national name game.
“Their surnames are often a form of Anglicised Chinese. But the
Philippine penchant for fun shines through.”
Tsinoys apply
imagination and humor in the naming process. Sutherland’s
favorites include: Bach Johann Sebastian, Edgar Allan Pe, and Van Go.
When they become
U.S. citizens, some Filipinos opt to “Americanize” their names. What happens
then?
Side-splitting
mayhem, says a tongue-in-cheek Internet feature. Gregorio Talahib, for example,
becomes who else? George Bush! That’s who. Tomas Cruz is recycled as Tom
Cruise, while Remigio Batungbacal becomes Remington Steel. But Maria Pascua
prefers Mary Christmas.
The Internet
feature is captioned: “Filipino Names = U.S. Citizens.” It asserts the
pre-September 11 Immigration and Naturalization Service “released the list of
names of Filipinos, who changed their names, when they became naturalized U.S.
citizens.”
The U.S. too, is
full of John Smiths. But that does not deter the mint-new Pinoy
Americans. Thus, Juanito Lakarin took the name of Johnny Walker, while
Esteban Magtaka picked Stevie Wonder. Leon Mangubat flicked through the sports
pages and chose Tiger Woods. Victoria Malihim preferred to be literal; she
picked Victoria Secret
“Pinoy is
what Filipinos call each other, a term of endearment,” author Gilda Cordero
Fernando writes. “You’re Pinoy from Pilipino just like you’re tisoy from
mestizo or chinoy from chino.
“It’s a nickname just
as Minoy is from Maximo, Tinay from Florentina and Kikay from Francisca. But
now they’re Maxi and Ben and Tintin and Cheska.”
So, no one raises
an eyebrow that Boxer Manny Paquiao named his two girls Queen Elizabeth and
Princess. Ay, lintik!
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