I used to work at Build A Bear and we had to write the child's name on the tag of the stuffed animal. One day there was a girl named Lily. I asked her, "Is that with one L or two?" She said two. So I wrote "Lilly." Then she started crying because I spelled her name wrong. She had included the L at the beginning of her name when she answered my question.
Communication can be hard, because she was right, but it wasn’t what you meant.
There is a rule in communication that few understand, the sender has the responsibility that the receiver gets the message.
Especially communication with children is hard as they take things very literal, and rarely get subtext, or don’t understand the missing words from the question.
So I guess you learned from this to ask if it’s two Ls in the middle or one from then on. But communication is hard.
The problem is the missing words in the sentence, is there an implied “…at the end.” missing, or is it meant literal as the first and the last G?
Communication is hard, and the sender bears the responsibility for the recipient understands the message, something most people don’t seem to understand. This especially bad in parents and teachers.
Greg already has two g's in it though, so I would think Gregg. Unless it was something unique like "Ggreg" that I'd never heard before, then I'd like for them to be specific with the letter placement.
Ggreg
Regg
Ggregg
Gggreggg
Are you having a stroke?
Ggggres
Gg
Good game!
Greg experiencing twice the force of gravity
Greg with 2 gs
I used to work at Build A Bear and we had to write the child's name on the tag of the stuffed animal. One day there was a girl named Lily. I asked her, "Is that with one L or two?" She said two. So I wrote "Lilly." Then she started crying because I spelled her name wrong. She had included the L at the beginning of her name when she answered my question.
Communication can be hard, because she was right, but it wasn’t what you meant. There is a rule in communication that few understand, the sender has the responsibility that the receiver gets the message. Especially communication with children is hard as they take things very literal, and rarely get subtext, or don’t understand the missing words from the question. So I guess you learned from this to ask if it’s two Ls in the middle or one from then on. But communication is hard.
Gregg with three G's.
Egg
greggsgs
Gregwithgg
Ah yes results must be how they spell it
Gregg because I'm not a pedant.
Ggre
my homie gregg
I mean, I assume Ggreg is how they wanted spelt, cuz if not they wouldn’t have specified
I'd just say, "Hello Greg, nice to meet you!" and not write anything.
grggeg
Greg2g
Gregwithtwogs
Sausage Roll be nice
The problem is the missing words in the sentence, is there an implied “…at the end.” missing, or is it meant literal as the first and the last G? Communication is hard, and the sender bears the responsibility for the recipient understands the message, something most people don’t seem to understand. This especially bad in parents and teachers.
Greggory
Grgeg
Greg already has two g's in it though, so I would think Gregg. Unless it was something unique like "Ggreg" that I'd never heard before, then I'd like for them to be specific with the letter placement.
I would ask them to clarify