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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

753.0. "Generic people, places and things" by SMOOT::ROTH (W -+- ) Fri Dec 15 1989 17:36

If this is already covered in another note, please point me to it...

I'd like to hear from everone on what kinds of generic "people","places"
or "things" that you have come across... you know, the kinds of names you
see on sample forms, sample addresses, or are used in everyday speech.
Include, if possible, information about its origin or typical useage.
Also, include your geography as I'm sure your location on the planet has
some relevance on all this...


Here's my list: (I live in the Midwest in the USA)

PERSON- "JOHN DOE" or "JANE DOE"

    Seems to  appear  in  police  shows,  used  as a reference to a
    deceased person whose name is not unknown.
    
    
PERSON- "JOHN Q. PUBLIC"

    Sometimes used is political discussions, refers to your average
    ordinary voter/taxpayer.

PERSON- "JOE BLOW" (or, I suppose, "JOE BLOE")

    I've never seen it  used  in  print,  but  crops up in informal
    discussions.

PERSON- "JOE DOAKS"

    I've seen this used 'sample' government forms.  Probably gets a
    lot of use in military circles. I'm sure any of you ex-military
    types know a few names in use as well.

PLACE- "ANYTOWN, USA"

    Seen used as sample address in 'junk mail' mailings.

PLACE- "PODUNK" or "EAST PODUNK"

    Used in conversation to refer to  a  tiny  rural  town.   "East
    Podunk" is probably smaller than "PODUNK".

THING- "WHATCHAMACALLIT"
THING- "THINGAMABOB"
THING- "THINGAMAJIG"
THING- "DOOHICKEY"


Okay, you get the idea.  I started this note because I'm curious as to
what kind of 'generic' people, places and things are in use elsewhere.

Thanks-

Lee

T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
753.1East Oshkosh (WI?)LEDS::HAMBLENskazhi kishmish!Fri Dec 15 1989 19:060
753.2FooBar, Richard RoeSUBWAY::KABELdoryphoreFri Dec 15 1989 19:0912
    FooBar -- used to refer to a generic routine, node....   I made the
    mistake of using this name for my workstation.  You might be
    surprised at the number of people who test routines with parameter
    values like FOOBAR::anyone.  I imagine that the person who had the
    name before me gave it up because of the false alarms.  Each has to
    be tracked (traced?) and resolved for our local net police.
    
    re John Doe:  This is found in 'mercan jurisprucence.  John Doe is
    the first anonymous or unknown party.  I believe Richard Roe is the
    second, and there are others after than. I'll consult my wife, the
    lawyer, if you want further detail.  Note that these names probably
    did not originate here, but are commonly used here.
753.3PASTIS::MONAHANhumanity is a trojan horseSat Dec 16 1989 16:076
    	Those legal people are also known in England.
    
    	In France "thing" translates to "machin", "truc", "bidule", or in
    moments of stress "machintrucbidule".
    
    	"Anybody" in French tends to be Dupont or Dupond.
753.4More stuffBLAS03::FORBESBill Forbes - LDP EngrngSun Dec 17 1989 00:2920
    Re: <<< Note 753.0 by SMOOT::ROTH "W -+- " >>>

    "Acme" and "Ajax" seem to be generic names of corporations - as in
    "Acme Trucking Company".  (Remember all that stuff Wile E. Coyote
    ordered from generic supply companies?)
    
    The generic U.S. eatery is "Joe's."
    
    The generic brand-name product is "Brand X" - its competition is
    always "Brand Y."
    
    The generic U.S. President is "George Bush."
    
    Bill
    
    
    BTW, for the benefit of the small minority of readers unfamiliar with
    the etymology of "FOOBAR": it is derived from "FUBAR", an acronym for
    "F***ed Up Beyond All Recognition."  :-|
 
753.5PROXY::CANTORGo ahead; quote my say.Sun Dec 17 1989 18:1220
Here's some I remember from my days in the U.S. Army.

Joe -- any trainee, or collectively, all trainees:  "When is Joe coming
back from the field today?"  "They'll be back about 1530."

Charlie -- from Victor Charlie, the phonetic pronunciation of V.C, Viet
Cong.  Any individual V.C., or any group of them.  Do you really need
any more explanation?

Jody -- any best friend you left back home.  Probably now having sexual
relations with your s.o.

Tom Terrific (or any other cartoon or comic book hero) -- any young
ninety-day wonder, i.e., recent graduate from O.C.S.   Sorry, sir, I
meant no offense.  I was just explaining for the readers here how the
term was used; I wouldn't use it like that myself.  Sir.   :-)

Dave C.


753.6hmmmphLEZAH::BOBBITTLEZAH lives!Mon Dec 18 1989 17:048
    'Scuse me?
    
    Never heard *anyone* take *my* name in vain...
    
    ;)
    
    -Jody
    
753.7TimbuktuSHARE::SATOWMon Dec 18 1989 18:087
Generic for a faraway place.

Often spelled "Timbucktoo" and used with ". . . from here to"


	Clay    

753.8J. Random UserSKIVT::ROGERSDamnadorum MultitudoMon Dec 18 1989 19:495
Does anyone else remember this guy?  He was the generic unsophisticated user 
of any computer system.  Probably derived from Dave Garroway's friend - J. Fred 
Muggs.

Larry
753.9That trick never worksPROXY::CANTORGo ahead; quote my say.Tue Dec 19 1989 00:0423
Re .6

Yeah, Jody, that's right, but they probably didn't have you in mind. 
You don't fit the image.  I swear it's true, though.  Virtually anyone
who's been through basic training, at least at Fort Jackson, South
Carolina, will verify what I said.

Current rules prevent me from giving examples of what our sergeants told
us Jody was doing while we were doing pushups.


Re .8

Oh sure, I still run into good old J. Random User.


--

Another generic place, kind of like Timbuktoo, which is, after all a
real place name:  Frostbite Falls, Minnesota, after J. Ward's wonderful
Rocky and Bullwinkle cartoons.

Dave C.
753.10SSDEVO::EGGERSAnybody can fly with an engine.Tue Dec 19 1989 01:221
    "J. Random User" was MIT AI-Lab terminology in the mid to late 1960's.
753.11Tommy Atkins - British infantrymanMARVIN::KNOWLESRunning old protocolTue Dec 19 1989 14:5714
    I don't know if this is still current; but WWI (English) war reports
    were full of what was happening to Tommy.  I suppose his German
    counterpart (I shan't name him for fear of litigation under the
    Race Relations Act) got his name from the cartoon pairing of
    Tom[my] and Jer[man]ry.
    
    <RATHOLE>
    Jermyn Street, London W.1., used to be German Street, until it was
    renamed when German-sounding names became unpopular - some time
    about 1913, I suppose.
    <END_RATHOLE>
    
    b
    
753.12Dogsbody SometeacherMARVIN::KNOWLESRunning old protocolTue Dec 19 1989 15:024
    I don't know if this is a common form or a nonce one made up by
    my (sardonic) maths master.
    
    b
753.13SUBWAY::BOWERSCount Zero InterruptTue Dec 19 1989 16:094
    I used to have a manager who referred to the generic dumb user as Sally
    (or Sammy) Rottensox.
    
    -dave
753.14COOKIE::DEVINEBob Devine, CXNTue Dec 19 1989 23:503
    As an example, of a famous usage of a fake name, the "roe" in
    the US abortion decision of "Roe v. Wade" comes from "Jane Roe"
    name that was used to hide the identity of the actual woman.
753.15from momGNUVAX::QUIRIYChristineWed Dec 20 1989 02:148
    
    I can't believe I thought of one:
    
    My mother referred to the malady suffered by a child who wants to stay
    home from school as "school-a-roo-stay-homus".  She even let me stay
    home with that once in a while!
    
    CQ
753.16Generic theater namesNHASAD::KRINERtanstaaflWed Dec 20 1989 02:444
    In the theater, the generic names used when the program went to print
    before a part was cast, were George or Georgina Spelvin.  Which I found
    quite amusing when the X-rated flick _The Devil in Miss Jones_ starred
    "Georgina Spelvin" in the title role.
753.17Here's JohnnyPROXY::CANTORGo ahead; quote my say.Wed Dec 20 1989 06:318
The generic wise-acre kid in school is Johnny Badmouth.  


One Tuesday Johnny Badmouth brought a bag of ping pong balls to school in a
paper bag.  Now, every Tuesday, Johnny's teacher...   No, I'd better
not.

Dave C.
753.18Rock on, Tommy !CURRNT::PREECEShipwrecked and comatoseWed Dec 20 1989 10:4221


Re .12

	"Tommy" was actually Pt. Thomas Atkins, which was the "generic"
	example used to show new recruits how to fill out their Army 
	pay-books and personnel forms (which also include a Last Will
	and Testament form, in the back!)
	They were supllied with a blank book, and a sample filled of an 
	already-completed one, in the the name of Thomas Atkins.
	Hence "Tommy Atkins", the Universal British Soldier


Re.-a couple
	My old boss used to refer to certain troublesome clients, in 
	times of stress, as "Old B*ggerballs" - apparently another 
	military expression.


Ian
753.19Test DataVINO::MCGLINCHEYSancho! My Armor! My TECO Macros!Wed Dec 20 1989 15:2113
    
    	While working on hospital information systems, I had to create
    	phony 'patients' so I could use their accounts as test data.
    
    	My favorite names were:
    
    		Chester Honeyhugger (Thank you, Jonathan Winters)
    
    		Ophelia Rass	(Think about it.)
    
    		Hugh Q. Finorkny (NO ONE would have that name!)
    
    	-- Glinch
753.20beer and stuffHUNEY::MACHINWed Dec 20 1989 15:5111
    
    My father used a phrase, supposedly from Army days, for things that
    didn't perform their alotted functions properly.  Most often applied to 
    beer that was not of the finest quality, it was: "This horse is
    definitely unfit for work." 
    
    Richard.
    
    By the way, I wonder which nationality has the greatest number of
    generic terms for drink - specifically beer. 'Neck oil' is my
    favourite.
753.21more FUBARCAM::MAZURIt ain&#039;t the meat, it&#039;s the lotion.Wed Dec 20 1989 21:3826
RE:.4
   > BTW, for the benefit of the small minority of readers unfamiliar with
   > the etymology of "FOOBAR": it is derived from "FUBAR", an acronym for
   > "F***ed Up Beyond All Recognition."  :-|
    
    When I worked on a US Navy project at GE, they gave me a list of
    acronyms recognized by the Navy (it was a large book). One of them
    was FUBAR.  The de-acronymation of it was *Fouled* Up Beyond All
    Recognition.  
    
    Here's s'more:
    
    Plain Jane
    Mary Jane
    East Juhunga
    53 miles west of Venus. (B-52's song)
    Smalltown, USA
    Main Street, USA
    Joe Cool Hard Guy
    Freddie Free-loader
    Uncle Sam
    
    
    
    
    
753.22some moreLAMHRA::WHORLOWAre you proud of Digital&#039;s computers?Wed Dec 20 1989 21:5118
    G'day,
    A favourite reference to Government (junior) ministers is used by
    'Uncle Roger' in Flight magazine...  
    
    Roland Freelunch.
    
    
    Downunder, there are places that are :-
    Back o' Bourke  - way out in the boondocks - Bourke is far west NSW
    beyond the black stump - likewise.
    
    There is cooking that would 'sicken a brown dog'
    
    and the generic New Zealand country village of Whykickamoocow
    and in Oz , Kickatinalong
    
    derek
    
753.23ULYSSE::LIRONWed Dec 20 1989 22:1214
In France, a far away place is P�tahouchnoque (very, very far away).


A village in the countryside, when you don't want to remember its 
name, is Triffouillis-les-Oies.


La Saint-Glinglin is a date in a very, very distant future.


A man-in-the street may be called Tartempion, Trucmuche, or Duchnoque.


 roger
753.24East OvershoeVMSDEV::WIBECANLife&#039;s not a ogre, but a gruesome moose!Wed Dec 20 1989 23:114
I've seen "East Overshoe" used as a random hick town (not to be confused with
Hicksville, NY) far away from everything.

						Brian
753.25VISA::MONAHANhumanity is a trojan horseThu Dec 21 1989 08:144
    	.20 is derived from a very old shaggy-dog story where a customer at
    a bar complains about the quality of the beer, and finally ends up
    submitting a sample to the public health analysis laboratory. You have
    the punch line correct.
753.26TaHUNEY::MACHINThu Dec 21 1989 16:356
    re .25
    
    Thanks! That does explain a lot -- especially about the taste of beer
    in the North of England. 
    
    Richard. 
753.27Yoh, Joe!REVEAL::LEEWook... Like &#039;Book&#039; with a &#039;W&#039;Thu Dec 21 1989 22:003
Don't forget good ole G.I. Joe.

Wook
753.28he was there...LYRIC::QUIRIYChristineSun Dec 24 1989 18:299
    
    What with all this talk about service-related generics, what about
    Kilroy?  (I know nothing about the origins...)
    
    Just waiting for my Christmas bread to rise...
    
    CQ
    
    
753.29Are you clumsy?MLCSSE::BRACKWed Dec 27 1989 15:5313
To refer to a person that drops things, and seems to be uncoordinated we would
call them a klutz. While I was moving into my room at college, everyone was
tired, and were dropping things, and so the name klutz was flying around quite
often. Then someone came in (one of the people that had been calling almost
everyone a klutz) and informed us that we had to stop. Naturally, since he was
one of the biggest offenders, we were suspicious of this announcement, and
demanded a reason. His answer?



One of the people moving into that building was named Klutz.

			- - -  Karl
753.30Did Kipling first use the name?SSDEVO::GOLDSTEINWed Dec 27 1989 20:0421
    Re: .11 and .18
    
    Which came first, the generic example or the Kipling poem?
    
    	Oh, it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' 'Tommy,
    	  go away';
        But it's 'Thank you, Mister Atkins,' when the band
    	  begins to play.
    
    	It's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' 'Chuck him
          out, the brute!'
    	But it's 'Saviour of 'is country' when the guns begin to
          shoot.
    
    	Then it's Tommy this, an' Tommy that, an' Tommy
    	  'ow's yer soul?'
    	But it's 'Thin red line of 'eroes' when the drums begin
    	  to roll.
    
    Bernie
    
753.31I think he borrowed it...CURRNT::PREECEShipwrecked and comatoseThu Dec 28 1989 21:0017
>                      -< Did Kipling first use the name? >-


Bernie, I checked a little - not too easy, most of my references are away 
for the holidays, or recovering therefrom - but the nearest thing I could 
find to a military historian (Mike Gething, of "Defence" magazine) suggests 
that Pt. Thomas Atkins was around well before Kipling's day.

In those days, of course, your average hero was likely to be nearly, or 
completely, illiterate, so the detailed example was even more necessary.

I'm ready to be proved wrong, though - I claim Christmas fever as my 
defence!!

Happy new year to all our readers!

Ian
753.32xerox (lower case)BLAS03::FORBESBill Forbes - LDP EngrngSat Dec 30 1989 18:414
    Let's not forget generic term for xerographic copier.
    
    Bill
    
753.33SSDEVO::EGGERSAnybody can fly with an engine.Sat Dec 30 1989 19:132
    Hmmm.  I hope the Xerox (TM registered) Corporation's legal department
    doesn't see .-1.
753.34And now for an old joke!WELMT2::HILLTechnology is my Vorpal swordTue Jan 02 1990 10:4611
    Re .30 and .31
    
    
    Fresh from the old joke section:
    
    "Do you like Kipling?"
    
    "I don't know, I've never Kippled"
    
    In the same vein, I'll let you work out your own joke about the
    author of David Copperfield.
753.35ARIANE::KEHILYFri Jan 05 1990 17:093
    
    I've heard British Army squaddies referred to as GRUNTs (Government
    Reject, Unfit for Normal Training).
753.36?TLE::RANDALLliving on another planetFri Jan 05 1990 18:214
    I thought it was because they did the grunt work (i.e. heavy
    physical labor, work that makes you grunt).
    
    --bonnie
753.37Generic Armed ForcesWOOK::LEEWook... Like &#039;Book&#039; with a &#039;W&#039;Sat Jan 06 1990 00:104
    In the U.S., I believe marine corp recruits are called jar heads.  What
    about the other armed forces?
    
    Wook
753.38By the numbers, sling ... epithetsSASE::CANTORGo ahead; quote my say.Sat Jan 06 1990 02:365
Re .37

In the U.S. Army, marine recruits are called jar heads, too.

Dave C.
753.39LEZAH::QUIRIYChristineSat Jan 06 1990 04:5311
    
    All this service-related stuff is making me remember things better 
    left forgotten... :-)
    
    In the AF, we called squads of new recruits (before they got their 
    fatigues) "Rainbow squads".  They had ya marching to and fro at the 
    first opportunity.  Sounds kinda quaint, doesn't it?
    
    Also, "jeep", the "go'fer" equivalent.
    
    CQ
753.40ZipperheadsKAOO01::LAPLANTEMon Jan 08 1990 14:087
    
    In Canada, and probably the rest of the Commonwealth, members of
    the armoured corps  are called Zipperheads because of the
    scars left by the stitches when they crash forward and open their
    foreheads on the hatch covers of the tanks.

    Roger
753.41 :^) WLDWST::DERICKSONSame Stuff - Different DayTue Jan 09 1990 11:3612
    Another Air Force term - PINGERS - 
    
    It's a new recruit just out of basic training.  At night, if you're real
    quiet, you can hear the hair growing back in on the poor fellows
    shaved heads!
    
                                PING
    
    Ex-Master Instructor
    Ex-SSGT
    USAF
    
753.42A selection of generic British people...VOGON::BALLUn amigo del ambianteWed Jan 10 1990 19:4745
All of these are in common use in the UK.  It would be interesting to see how 
many are also common in the States and how many are uniquely British.

PEOPLE

John Smith - 	Kind of strange to give the name `John' to baby Smith when it's 
		used so much as a generic but I believe J.S. is still statistic-
		ally the most common name in Britain.

Fred Bloggs	& Freda Bloggs as a female version

Joe Soap -	I think this one is particularly used in the North of England.

N.O. Body

A.N. Other

`Colour' names are often used when several generic people are required - 
Mr Brown, Mrs Green, Miss Black, Mr White etc.  A bit like Cluedo.

PRODUCTS

I don't think anyone's mentioned `widget' yet - in its original use as a 
generic product rather than a DECwindows thingy.

JOBS

`Average Adjuster' - I've seen this on forms as an example job.  It sounds like
a very dull job just involving columns of figures but it's actually to do with
insurance claims.

`Sagger-Maker's Bottom-Knocker' - A real though obscure job in the pottery 
industry.  Occaisionally used as an example because it sounds very silly.

I suppose vaguely related to this subject - at least to the legal use of `John 
Doe' - is the Chiltern Hundreds.  This is a more or less fictional job which 
British MPs can take as a procedural mechanism to give up being an MP - they're
not allowed to just resign but if they take `an office of profit under the crown'
they cease to be an MP.  There's at least one `spare' bogus post in case two or
more MPs want to leave at once.

Jon


   
753.43an American viewSSDEVO::EGGERSAnybody can fly with an engine.Wed Jan 10 1990 22:4626
    Re: .42
    
    Here is an American's view of your names:
    
	John Smith:	Very common
    
	Fred Bloggs & Freda Bloggs:	Unheard of.

	Joe Soap: "Joe" is common, as in "an average Joe", the common
    		   man, or "GI Joe", the common soldier. I've never heard
    		   of "Soap" as a name.
    
	N.O. Body & A.N. Other: Never heard of them. I like them though.
    
	`Colour' names:	Also used here.

	`widget': Not common, but well recognized.
	
    	`Average Adjuster': Unheard of.  "Insurance adjuster" is well
    		recognized as one who determines how much insurance you
    		will collect for your crumpled car.
    
	`Sagger-Maker's Bottom-Knocker': No comment needed.

	Chiltern Hundreds:  American politicians are allowed to resign,
    		sometimes strongly encouraged!
753.44Saggar maker's bottom knockerWELMTS::HILLTechnology is my Vorpal swordThu Jan 11 1990 13:393
    But it's a real trade, found in foundry work.
    
    Nick
753.45Used car salesman.GRNDAD::STONESPECIAL WHEN LITThu Jan 11 1990 19:115
    
    
    How about the generic "used car salesman" which represents the epitome
    of unethical, untrustworthy characters with which one may have to 
    conduct business.
753.46SSDEVO::EGGERSAnybody can fly with an engine.Fri Jan 12 1990 00:261
    Yeah, I guess "used car salesman" is lower than "dog catcher".
753.47From Click and ClackLEZAH::QUIRIYChristineSat Jan 13 1990 23:5814
    
    This morning I listened to the repeat of last Sunday's "Car Talk" and 
    was reminded of:
    
    Boyd, Dewey, Cheatham & Howe (law firm)
    
    and 
    
    Vinnie Goombahts (Perhaps one of the Italian American members of the
    JOYOFLEX community would be kind enough to explain this one and to 
    offer an alternate spelling to the last name...)
    
    CQ
    ("Car Talk" is a call-in radio talk show.)
753.48Not Italian but...SEAPEN::PHIPPSSun Jan 14 1990 18:444
        I believe it is Boombats... or at least that's how I heard it. 8^}

        	Mike
753.49A Left-handed What?WOOK::LEEWook... Like &#039;Book&#039; with a &#039;W&#039;Tue Jan 16 1990 00:336
    A 'left-handed smoke shifter' is a generic nonexistant item, typically
    used to get rid of some eager novice who is getting in the way.
    
    At least that's how it was used when I heard it.
    
    Wook
753.50spotted this one?MARVIN::KNOWLESintentionally Rive GaucheMon Mar 05 1990 16:5018
    re .-1
    
    The generic non-existent item I've heard is `blunt hook' - used
    in particular by a surgeon who doesn't know what to do next:
    `Get me my blunt hook'. The trick is to send someone looking
    for it, and time your re-starting of the operation (`Oh well,
    I suppose I'll have to make do without one, but don't blame
    me if ...') to happen just before the wild-goose chaser gets
    back and says there's no such thing.
    
    
    Re widgets
    
    Has anyone said yet that widgets are usually made (in British English)
    by the Acme Co (or, more recently, ACME plc)?
    
    b
    b
753.51FINNN::DONHAMNothing up my sleeve...Wed Mar 07 1990 19:0515
The name used as a signature for most dunning notices is ficticious and
chosen entirely on how the collection group feels the average citizen will
react to the name. Double-syllable first names coupled with single-syllable
last names seem popular.

My magazine for years kept Jane Field on staff as Field Reporter...anyone
who called up complaining was directed to write to dear Jane.

Speaking of Jane, don't prostitutes use the name John in some generic way?
I think a 'John' is the same as a 'trick' in this case.

And there's a 'Dear John' letter, of course.

-Perry
753.52FINNN::DONHAMNothing up my sleeve...Wed Mar 07 1990 19:076
Just remembered another...any southern U.S. 'good-ol' boy' may be
referred to as Billy Bob or Bubba. I think Bobby Sue is the feminine 
equivalent.

-Perry
753.53A good trivia question.ROULET::RUDMANAlways the Black Knight.Thu Jun 21 1990 19:373
    Not to forget the "Dear Jane" letter.
                              
    						Don
753.54potty break!ANOVAX::TFOLEYBattle of Wits = unarmed combat.Thu Jun 21 1990 21:532
    you can go to the "john" also.
    
753.55FriendsCUPCSG::RUSSELLFri Jun 29 1990 02:5813
    RE: .47
    
    Vinny Goombah (sp?) is a joke reference to an Italian name.  Vinny is
    generic (and not quite complimentary) for an Italian man.  Meant to be
    short for Vincenzo. Goombah roughly translates as friend or associate
    (possibly neighbor?).
    
    Since the car talk guys, Click and Clack Tappet are really named
    Malliozzi, I don't think it is too outrageous for them to use
    either Vinny or Goombah.  Me, I would not use it and expect to get
    served at any self-respecting restaurant in Boston's Italian North End.  
    
      Ciao,  Margaret
753.56Anyone help with the first name?HEART::MACHINFri Jun 29 1990 15:385
    
    There's also a generic name for (male) opera singers. I can't remember
    the Christian name, but the surname is Fatagitti.
    
    Richard.
753.57Spelling vs SayingCASP::SEIDMANAaron SeidmanSat Jun 30 1990 00:023
    RE .55
    
    Pronounced Malliotsi, but spelled Magliozzi, I believe.
753.58TKOV51::DIAMONDThis note is illegal tender.Wed Jul 04 1990 04:1433
    In the old days in Waterloo (if Waterloo can be considered old enough
    to have had old days) the generic userid was "fbaggins".  Occasionally
    "fred" was used as an alternative.  In fact, I have the impression
    that "fbaggins" was usually used in instructional materials and "fred"
    was used in bug reports.  Unfortunately I've forgotten the second
    generic userid.
    
    In Japan, if there are samples for forms to be written in a bank or
    department store or whatever, the family name of the sample person
    is usually the same as the name of the company, and the given name
    is then some common given name such as Taro.  Perhaps another
    generic family name is the very common name of Yoshida.
    
    Not a generic, but along the lines of previous postings such as
    the name "John" being used for things other than people:
    Some of the places where prostitutes would start by sharing baths
    with their customers (instead of giving massages) used to call
    themselves Turkish baths, usually abbreviated to just "Torku", the
    Japanese name for Turkey.
    Then one day the ambassador of Turkey wanted to take a taxi to his
    embassy.  Typically, the taxi driver understood a few key syllables
    of the request, but the result was less typical.
    The government persuaded these establishments to change their names.
    
    Re .11
    > <RATHOLE>
    > Jermyn Street, London W.1., used to be German Street, until it was
    > renamed when German-sounding names became unpopular - some time
    > about 1913, I suppose.
    And of course, the entire city of Berlin, Ont. (adjacent to Waterloo)
    was renamed about the same time.
    > <END_RATHOLE>
    You only thought that was the end.
753.59STAR::CANTORYou never outgrow your need for TECO.Sat Jul 14 1990 09:0413
On my recent vacation in Las Vegas, I took a shuttle van from the hotel
to the airport.  The driver had his own idiom (at least I've never heard
it anywhere before) for addressing the people on the bus.

He needed to know to which airlines each passenger was going, and so he
asked each of us, in turn, our destination.  He addressed each woman as
Lucille and each man as Leroy, and when addressing us all he said
"Leroys and Lucilles".  (When he dropped me off and handed me my
suitcase, he said "So long, Leroy, ask for me next time you come to 
town."  Goodnaturedly, I said, "I sure will, Sylvester.  Thanks for the
ride."  I don't know his name.)

Dave C.
753.60Joe AverageSTAR::CANTORYou never outgrow your need for TECO.Mon Aug 06 1990 23:4726
Here's an example of usage of "Joe Average" from the TELECOM Digest.

Dave C.

TELECOM Digest     Tue, 26 Jun 90 01:05:17 CDT    Volume 10 : Issue 454

                            A B S T R A C T
 
------------------------------
 
Date: Sat, 23 Jun 90 22:13:20 EDT
From: Jack Winslade <[email protected]>
Subject: Exchanges Taken Out of Service
Reply-to: [email protected]
Organization: DRBBS Technical BBS, Omaha, Ne. 402-896-3537
 
 
In a message of <19 Jun 90 02:46:26>, Woody writes:
 
 >In the midst of the vast numbers of nxx prefixes put into service each
 >year, does anyone have examples of nxx prefixes taken out of service?
 
I ran into two such examples last year when I was attempting to make
up an >>ACCURATE<< prefix list for the Omaha dialing area.  The one
that they published in the phone book was a joke.  Even a cursory
inspection by Joe Average would find some omissions.  [....]