Why is clark called nobby




















You will find a close knit but welcoming group of keen genealogists all prepared to offer advice and help to new members. And it's not all serious business. The boards are often a place to relax and be entertained by all kinds of subjects. Researching: spence parker haylock prime belton,andrews,hook,hicklin,islington,tottenham,. Freddy Steele played for Stoke City as a centre forward and his nickname was Nobby cause he used to head the ball a lot.

We have a Norbert working the internet cafe here, and he is from Argentina. I also knew a Nobby who was a Norman. That's confused the issue! Nobby was also Cockney for Fine, In the song "where did you get that hat " Kim As a clark myself, I can tell you that my fathers nickname was nobby.

He told me that it is a name used for men with the surname of clark. Just googled this! Nobby Clark The explanation given for the use of this nickname is that clerks pronounced "clarks" in British dialects in the City of London used to wear Nobby hats, or top hats.

Alternate spellings include "Knobby" and "Clarke". Certain Surnames have pre-determined nicknames? Why do cats have nine lives? Answers 1 to 5 of 5. Best Answer No best answer has yet been selected by rcrayner. Have an acquaintance named Dusty Rhodes Nobby actually comes from the British Army in India during the Raj - a native indian working as a clerk in administration offices was called a Nobbi in the local language - so a clerk was a Nobbi, so anyone called Clark became "Nobbi" Clark.

They did so much writing that calluses or "nobs" formed on their fingers. As such, they were nicknamed "Nobby Clerks". The term "nob" was also used to refer to posh people and members of the aristocracy. Clerks also ended up with this name because they dressed well and were considered a bit posh.

We also have a wild theory, from out of left field. In the days of Captain Cook, before Nobbys was partially demolished, the rocky outcrop resembled a giant shark's fin.

Nobby Clark is cockney rhyming slang for a shark. And Charles Clerke was from Essex, the heart of cockney slang. A painting of HMS Endeavour in Ian King, of Warners Bay, said the other side of the coin was that some people "pronounce the letter 'h' as 'haitch'.

On the subject of grammar Nazism, Ian asks: "Why is it that people say 'the honest truth' and 'in actual fact'.



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