Old fashioned nickname that means driftwood?
Submitted by davymuncher on Wed, 23/12/2009 - 6:28pm
Hey! Years ago my siblings, cousins, and I found out that my Aunt used to have a nickname, and her siblings stopped calling her by it once they looked it up and found out it means driftwood. Since then, everyone of my parents generation and my grandparents have kept it a secret from all of us "new generation". Today we got talking again and apparently last night some of my cousins were up for a couple hours last night looking for what in the world Driftwood could refer to, and I thought "Hey! Maybe some of the geniuses on Neomallers know!"
So... anyone know an old fashioned (maybe 40's?) woman nickname that sounds nice, but actually means driftwood? (Can't find it in a dictionary either, so it's probably a really old one)
Thanks!

Did a google search, cou
Marlow? chatarra (suppos
LOL pip.. great minds
wait--ur aunt was called
-high 5's-
kermat13 wrote:wait--ur
Is the nickname based on
Oh wow my uncle broke wh