alltoseek (
alltoseek) wrote in
where_away2012-10-22 12:47 pm
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Published Book By Dr S E Maturin
From the film's deleted scenes, chapter "Shipboard Life":
Bonden reads out the title, we are shown the subtitle and authorship:
If anyone has a screencap I would be happy to add it!
Bonden reads out the title, we are shown the subtitle and authorship:
DISEASES
MOST USUAL AMONG
SEAMEN
====================================================
AN Examination of Existing Conditions with particular
attention given to the Pervasive Corrupting Influence
of the GROG ration.
====================================================BY DR. S. E. M A T U R I N.
Of TRINITY COLLEGE, Fellow of the ROYAL SOCIETY
====================================================FIRST EDITION
If anyone has a screencap I would be happy to add it!
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Well, duh, but you can sign it as 'John' :P
So what's short for 'Johnathon'?
And if John can shorten to Jno I don't see why either Jonathon or Johnathon can't also shorten to Jno. English is weird.
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Jon or Jonny as a diminutive, but I guess it's not a common enough name to need a formal abbreviation. If it did, would it be Jno'n??
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In 2011 "Johnathan" ranked #240 in name popularity, and "Jonathan" ranked #31. There are several other sort-of commonish variants, like "Jonathon" with (#820) and without an 'h' (#612), and even less common variants.
So yeah, no-h beats with-h, but both are actually relatively common.
I expect the 'h' is in there sometimes for the same reason it is in "John" (#27). "Jon" (#687) without the h is much less common.
Maybe the UK is stricter with name spellings, but in the US variations are very common. For example, in 2011, "Stephen" ranked #229 and "Steven" #124.
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Jon might be but Jonathan doesn't shorten to 'Jack', (being a name with a different root and eytmology) and John does. So Jack is John, written Jno...
Yeah, makes no sense to me either, but that's the English language for you!
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