Back again with yet another CAF. This is the updated/more recent version of this one: Short CAF w rules (based on my now-husband’s family, you can really see the big changes since I made it in 2019!)
LN: ends in double L
DGF(d., would be 107): FN ends in -bert // MN is a filler name
DGM(d., would be 100): FN peaked between 1939 and 1945 // MN ends in -een [LN: an Anglicised [name_u]Irish[/name_u] name]
DS(71): FN was formerly #1 in the USA // MN is father’s MN
DD(68): FN is a former queen consort of [name_u]Scotland[/name_u] // MN appears in the title of a song
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DS(71):
DW(63): FN begins with [name_f]Ros[/name_f]- // MN ends in H [LN is a common boy’s name]
DD1(35): FN has multiple common spellings // MN is a name you frequently see on Nameberry
-DH(31): FN can be shortened to a one syllable nickname // MN is a former king of [name_u]England[/name_u] [LN ends in -son]
DD2(30): FN was popular during the 1980s // MN is 1 syllable and 4 letters long
-DH(30): FN was popular during the 1980s // MN is 1 syllable and 4 letters long [LN is an emotion, feeling or mood ending in Y, eg [name_u]Happy[/name_u], Sleepy, Hungry]
–DS(2): FN is the same as uncle DH(31)'s FN but has a different nickname // MN is 1 syllable and 4 letters long
–DD(nb): FN is a Biblical place name // MN is a virtue name
DS(29): FN is a book in the [name_u]Christian[/name_u] Bible // MN is father and grandfather’s MN
-DW(34): FN has a Greek root // MN is the same as SIL DD(35)'s FN [LN is a colour]
–DD/DS1/DS2(exp): FN is a Biblical place name // MN is mother’s MN & FN is never out of the US top 1000 // MN is the same as father and grandfather’s MN & FN can be nicknamed Roo // MN is the same as uncle DH(30)'s middle name
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DD(68):
DH(62): FN is a fictional police officer or detective’s name // MN has a regal meaning [LN is a famous [name_f]British[/name_f] author’s last name]
DS(28): FN begins with J // MN starts and ends with the same letter
-DW(26): FN starts and ends with the same letter // MN appears on a calendar [LN is a former US President’s surname]
DD(24): FN ends in -line // MN appears in the title of a work considered classic literature
Female cat: a term of endearment