My mother’s father was “Papa”… but my Dad’s was “Bomp” (rhymes with “tromp”). Both, I was told, names that were given them by their first child… as interpreted, I now believe, by adults who wanted to hear something cute.
My neighbors grandson blessed me everyday when I got home with his presence, until his papa (grandfather) got home. I had nothing BUT we got along. Now I miss him!
Vo or Avo with a symbol that looked like an arrow pointing up over the O, don’t know how to make foreign language letters, Portuguese from the Azores, grandmother same letters but with an accent mark over the O.
My nephew called my dad Pop Pop and my mom Monamomma. One day my mom asked if I’d try and teach my nephew to say Grandpa because my dad hates being called pop or pop pop. So for maybe 40 minutes I work with him (my nephew not my dad because my dad can say grandpa with no help anywhooo)… my nephew refuses to say Grandpa. I could get him to say Grand… I could get him to say Pa. Mash the two together, it was like getting my mother in law to stop dropping some invisible R in the word Washington (It came out Warshington!) :D
Occasionally I got him to say Grandpa. Then my dad would walk by and I’d ask the trouble maker… who is that? And he says Pop Pop. Well eventually I gave up. Next day he’s saying Grandpa (me shaking head). I asked the air when the did that happen? My brother says about 10 minutes after you left. You would think my mom would be happy with this. She wasn’t, because not only did I get him to say Grandpa he also started to say Grandma… and she was Monamoma no more.
I, as a kid especially, pretty much always called my grandparents “Grampa and Gramma”. But if/when I wrote it, it would always be “Grandpa and Grandma”.
It does not matter what we, as grandparents, expect to be called. The child makes the decision. That’s why, instead of being Granddad, I am Peebah. (A much cooler name!)
The reverse is actually true: Grandpa and grandma are the traditional, time-honored monikers. Many in the Boomer generation can’t handle the truth and make up ridiculous names for themselves,
All these nicknames seem weird to me. Mine were Grandma [last name] and Grandpa [last name]. And Great-Grandpa [last name] and Grand-Aunt [first name, to distinguish between sisters].
My mother’s mother was GrandMOM. The woman in question didn’t care, but my mother was emphatic about it. My paternal grandmother was Grandma. Again, she didn’t care what we called her.
We always said their last names, which is weird. We don’t do that with aunts and uncles. Plus, the last names can change. My mom’s ex-mother in-law was married 4 times that I know of. The first marriage resulted in Mom’s ex-husband. By the time I came around both had remarried, and now Grandma X was Grandma Y, and there was a Grand X 2.0. Grandma Y stayed Grandma Y through the other 2 marriages.
Seriously confusing.
My mother-in-law was Nana-something that the oldest grandkid started and NOT because they were from the south. My husband never called his grandmother Nana. He called her Grandma Lily. Seriously what is up with my family using last names.
Mom herself never cared what my girls or my sister’s boys called her. The boys called her “Granny” and my girls called her “Grandma”.
Farfar and Morfar. Swedes make a distinction between paternal or maternal grandparents. Grand mother is Farmor and Mormor. Since all my grandkids are children from my daughers, I am Morfar to them. The tradition is fading with each generation as the family assimilates.
I only knew my maternal grandmother and think that I called her “gramma”. My grandkids call me “Papa” and my wife “gramma”. I don’t care for Paw-paw and other southern varieties. But as long as I get to see my grandkids I really don’t care. When I retired in 2012 we moved from sunny Florida to cold Western PA to be close to our 2 granddaughters.
The youngest grandchild called me Caca (kaka?). Then she upgraded to CawCaw which was closer to the MawMaw/PawPaw that others favored. And lately she’s been going with PawPaw. I was good with any or all of it. She can do no wrong.
(Others think she can, but they are obviously mistaken. Now when she turns three next week…. We shall see.)
I called my grandfather Pop-Pop But my older brother couldn’t say "Grandma " when he was a little boy . He called her “Pahkah” .So my siblings , cousins & I called my grandparents "Pahkah & Pop Pop "
During the years all my grandchildren lived far away, I became known [to some] as ‘California Grandma’. I no longer live there, but the name has stuck even though those grands now live back in SoCal. A few years ago, my closest [a mile away] began calling me ‘GramJams’ for some reason; I’m fortunate to have 8 fabulous grandkids. [I had only one living set of grandparents and a great-grandma who I don’t remember meeting.]
I ask my grandchildren to call me “grumpy.” Then they call me “grumpy grandpaw” for a while. Everybody, including us, has cats &/or dogs so that’s why I use “paw.”
When my oldest niece was little, she sort of swallowed the first vowel so it was something like “Grrnpa” and “Grrnma.” But if you, the adult, tried to say it back to her, she looked at you like you had 2 heads.
We had Grandma (pronounced Gra’ma) and Grandpa (pronounced Gran’pa) followed by lastnames for the four of them and Dad’s maternal grandma. Mom’s paternal grandma was Granny because that’s what Mom called her as a kid.
I never heard ‘Boompa’ until I moved to Arizona. Tucson car dealer Jim Click had his dad on commercials and called him Boompa. Both my grandpa’s died when I was so young, I don’t remember them. My nephews and niece called my parents “Mom-mom” and Pop-pop.
XF8U-3 11 months ago
Paypa.
grayjacobs 11 months ago
My grandkids call my Husband Boompa.
Ratkin Premium Member 11 months ago
Mine was Pappy.
Concretionist 11 months ago
My mother’s father was “Papa”… but my Dad’s was “Bomp” (rhymes with “tromp”). Both, I was told, names that were given them by their first child… as interpreted, I now believe, by adults who wanted to hear something cute.
dougcalder1 11 months ago
I consider ‘Grandpa’ an honourific and don’t have time for the cutesy names….
The dude from FL Premium Member 11 months ago
My neighbors grandson blessed me everyday when I got home with his presence, until his papa (grandfather) got home. I had nothing BUT we got along. Now I miss him!
j_m_kuehl 11 months ago
Ah, of the old pull my finger generation
Macushlalondra 11 months ago
Ok so you spell it grandpa but who really pronounces it that way? When I was a kid we pronounced it grampa, and grandma was pronounced gramma.
MeanBob Premium Member 11 months ago
Bestefar.
sergioandrade Premium Member 11 months ago
Vo or Avo with a symbol that looked like an arrow pointing up over the O, don’t know how to make foreign language letters, Portuguese from the Azores, grandmother same letters but with an accent mark over the O.
eromlig 11 months ago
“Papa George.”
Algolei I 11 months ago
My father mixes it up by signing birthday cards, “From Grandma and Grampa.”
Jeff0811 11 months ago
Grandma remarried, I called her Grandma, called him Vincent.
iggyman 11 months ago
Mine was Papap! A hard working coal miner, and a fine man!
matjestaet 11 months ago
Opa….
Troglodyte 11 months ago
That calls for a fist-boomp, er bump.
ntree84 11 months ago
In the Jimmy Stewart film, Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation, one of Jimmy’s grandsons called him “Boompa” and Jimmy’s character hated it.
cdward 11 months ago
Mine were Grandpa and Granddaddy.
kraftjeff 11 months ago
My nephew called my dad Pop Pop and my mom Monamomma. One day my mom asked if I’d try and teach my nephew to say Grandpa because my dad hates being called pop or pop pop. So for maybe 40 minutes I work with him (my nephew not my dad because my dad can say grandpa with no help anywhooo)… my nephew refuses to say Grandpa. I could get him to say Grand… I could get him to say Pa. Mash the two together, it was like getting my mother in law to stop dropping some invisible R in the word Washington (It came out Warshington!) :D
Occasionally I got him to say Grandpa. Then my dad would walk by and I’d ask the trouble maker… who is that? And he says Pop Pop. Well eventually I gave up. Next day he’s saying Grandpa (me shaking head). I asked the air when the did that happen? My brother says about 10 minutes after you left. You would think my mom would be happy with this. She wasn’t, because not only did I get him to say Grandpa he also started to say Grandma… and she was Monamoma no more.
Doug K 11 months ago
I, as a kid especially, pretty much always called my grandparents “Grampa and Gramma”. But if/when I wrote it, it would always be “Grandpa and Grandma”.
Ubintold 11 months ago
I bet he was a gas.
jagedlo 11 months ago
Besides, has Earl ever shown himself to be grand?
GoPickled Premium Member 11 months ago
Everything is fine as long as Nelson doesn’t address him as the Earl of Pickles…
tremaine53 11 months ago
Earl, are you sure it wasn’t ‘Bhoompa’?
ajr58(1) 11 months ago
It does not matter what we, as grandparents, expect to be called. The child makes the decision. That’s why, instead of being Granddad, I am Peebah. (A much cooler name!)
Ol' me 11 months ago
“Boompa” was what they called Jimmy Stewart’s character in “Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation.” Great movie. Typical Jimmy Stewart humor.
[Traveler] Premium Member 11 months ago
I only knew one of mine and he was granddaddy. I am papaw.
goboboyd 11 months ago
Why, in MY day…
ANIMAL 11 months ago
Different times FOR SURE..!!!!
chris_o42 11 months ago
My grandfather was always called “Pap-pap” when we were little, then just “Pap” when we got older.
elbow macaroni 11 months ago
The reverse is actually true: Grandpa and grandma are the traditional, time-honored monikers. Many in the Boomer generation can’t handle the truth and make up ridiculous names for themselves,
markkahler52 11 months ago
Guess it’s all in the spelling…
fencie 11 months ago
All these nicknames seem weird to me. Mine were Grandma [last name] and Grandpa [last name]. And Great-Grandpa [last name] and Grand-Aunt [first name, to distinguish between sisters].
felinefan55 Premium Member 11 months ago
My mother’s mother was GrandMOM. The woman in question didn’t care, but my mother was emphatic about it. My paternal grandmother was Grandma. Again, she didn’t care what we called her.
We always said their last names, which is weird. We don’t do that with aunts and uncles. Plus, the last names can change. My mom’s ex-mother in-law was married 4 times that I know of. The first marriage resulted in Mom’s ex-husband. By the time I came around both had remarried, and now Grandma X was Grandma Y, and there was a Grand X 2.0. Grandma Y stayed Grandma Y through the other 2 marriages.
Seriously confusing.
My mother-in-law was Nana-something that the oldest grandkid started and NOT because they were from the south. My husband never called his grandmother Nana. He called her Grandma Lily. Seriously what is up with my family using last names.
Mom herself never cared what my girls or my sister’s boys called her. The boys called her “Granny” and my girls called her “Grandma”.
nancyb creator 11 months ago
I know someone who is called Boompa by his grandchildren. My sister and brother in law are Mimi and Pop Pop.
rhpii 11 months ago
Farfar and Morfar. Swedes make a distinction between paternal or maternal grandparents. Grand mother is Farmor and Mormor. Since all my grandkids are children from my daughers, I am Morfar to them. The tradition is fading with each generation as the family assimilates.
ladykat 11 months ago
As long as the word is spoken with love, who cares?
wongo 11 months ago
I called my grandfather “Alfred”. He didn’t like to be called “Einstein”.
notjimothy 11 months ago
My Grandfather was called “Buppa” in his family
Bill The Nuke 11 months ago
I only knew my maternal grandmother and think that I called her “gramma”. My grandkids call me “Papa” and my wife “gramma”. I don’t care for Paw-paw and other southern varieties. But as long as I get to see my grandkids I really don’t care. When I retired in 2012 we moved from sunny Florida to cold Western PA to be close to our 2 granddaughters.
DM2860 11 months ago
I never corrected my grandkids and let them call me what they wanted.
KEA 11 months ago
Wish I had had either grandfather had been around when I was kid. :-/
Ishka Bibel 11 months ago
There is a local restaurant called “Grampa’s” because that is the family name, but everyone calls it “Grandpa’s”
MuddyUSA Premium Member 11 months ago
My grand kids call me “Muddy”!
Zebrastripes 11 months ago
LOL! Love it!
Mike Baldwin creator 11 months ago
Earl is holding a knife – so Grandpa it is!
cfkelley 11 months ago
Grandson calls me “Papa”.
Jimmyk939 11 months ago
Lots of variations. I’m Papa, my Dad was Gramps, my Wife’s Dad was Bumpa
ricknielsen55 11 months ago
I called mine Pompa. He was born in 1878. A Dane from Struer Denmark. Amazing man.
rob 11 months ago
My parents were supposed to be Granny and Grandpaw but my first said Nanny and Paw Paw so that’s what they became to him and my second child.
David Huie Green LoveJoyAndPeace 11 months ago
The youngest grandchild called me Caca (kaka?). Then she upgraded to CawCaw which was closer to the MawMaw/PawPaw that others favored. And lately she’s been going with PawPaw. I was good with any or all of it. She can do no wrong.
(Others think she can, but they are obviously mistaken. Now when she turns three next week…. We shall see.)Katzi428 11 months ago
I called my grandfather Pop-Pop But my older brother couldn’t say "Grandma " when he was a little boy . He called her “Pahkah” .So my siblings , cousins & I called my grandparents "Pahkah & Pop Pop "
kaycstamper 11 months ago
It is in the dictionary.
Martin 78 11 months ago
Wish I had known mine.
calmom75 Premium Member 11 months ago
During the years all my grandchildren lived far away, I became known [to some] as ‘California Grandma’. I no longer live there, but the name has stuck even though those grands now live back in SoCal. A few years ago, my closest [a mile away] began calling me ‘GramJams’ for some reason; I’m fortunate to have 8 fabulous grandkids. [I had only one living set of grandparents and a great-grandma who I don’t remember meeting.]
Brent Rosenthal Premium Member 11 months ago
My brother and I are both Poppy. Third generation
rasputin's horoscope 11 months ago
I think I’ll just mosey over to Rose Gumbo’s place and see if Meemaw is around…
ComicRelief 11 months ago
I ask my grandchildren to call me “grumpy.” Then they call me “grumpy grandpaw” for a while. Everybody, including us, has cats &/or dogs so that’s why I use “paw.”
Taracinablue 11 months ago
When my oldest niece was little, she sort of swallowed the first vowel so it was something like “Grrnpa” and “Grrnma.” But if you, the adult, tried to say it back to her, she looked at you like you had 2 heads.
CalLadyQED 11 months ago
We had Grandma (pronounced Gra’ma) and Grandpa (pronounced Gran’pa) followed by lastnames for the four of them and Dad’s maternal grandma. Mom’s paternal grandma was Granny because that’s what Mom called her as a kid.
steve7701 Premium Member 11 months ago
I never heard ‘Boompa’ until I moved to Arizona. Tucson car dealer Jim Click had his dad on commercials and called him Boompa. Both my grandpa’s died when I was so young, I don’t remember them. My nephews and niece called my parents “Mom-mom” and Pop-pop.
pbr50138 11 months ago
My grandparents were Mama and Papa Alley. I knew Papa Alley’s first name but not Mama Alley’s. But I’d never call them by their first name’s.
tcviii Premium Member 10 months ago
Grandpa is fine, but I usually go by Grampa.