If you want your son to be a "junior", you'll name him after his father. For instance, if his father's name is "John Lee Doe", your son would be named "John Lee Doe, Jr." Then you could call him "Junior" for short.
If you're a junior, that means technically your a"whatever your name is" the II. So your child will be "whatever your name is" the III. As a Junior, you may also be a "whatever your name is" the VI or any other number one greater than your father. Your son will have one number higher that you. If or when your father is no longer living, you can become the Senior and your son the Junior.
If the son's name is exactly the same as his father's (first, middle and last) then he may be called "Junior", or he could use "the Second" if he prefers. There is no requirement that he use either suffix.
If you name your son after his grandfather, the grandfather is living, and no other male in your generation or your son's has an identical name, then your son can be called Junior. If the grandfather is not living, it is not appropriate to call your son "Junior," but you could call him "the second" or "the third", etc., as your family history indicates.
His name is Little CJ. And that makes sense because is father's name was Christopher Johnson aka/ CJ. So the son is like CJ II or CJ junior and Little CJ.
Yes, when Senior dies, Junior can take the suffix of Senior if there is another of the same name (a son of Junior, for example) to take the Junior suffix. Otherwise Junior can simply drop the suffix altogether, or continue to use Junior if his professional identity, for example, is strongly tied to that naming convention.
Senior- for the father Junior- for the son III- for the grandson
If your name is Junior, then no. Junior Jr.?
"Junior" would indicate a son with the same exact name.
That's up to the son, if he's at the age where he's competent enough to make decisions.
Billy Crash Craddock did he has a Son name Billy?
A male is considered a junior when the son's name is exactly the same as the father's name. For example, William Joseph Anderson (father), and William Joseph Anderson Jr. (son).
The system of calling people Junior and Senior is completely separate from the system of calling them First, Second, Third, etc.Since someone who is "Junior" is at least the second person to carry a particular name, his son cannot be "the First". The son of Junior is at least "The Third."
yes
Junior is used to distinguish a father from son when their names are completely identical.
Yes You may be talking about a guy whose legal name is Junior. This is not usually the case. When a boy is named after his father, he will often sign his name with 'jr' at the end, and he is often called Junior as a nickname. Junior would be an unusual legal name, especially if it is his father's name as well. His father would be Junior Senior, and he would be Junior Junior. Imagine if their family name is Senior. they would be Junior Senior Senior, and Junior Senior Junior. If the son is in the military, he might be Major Junior Senior, Junior, Camp Jejune.
No. In order to be called a junior, the son must have the same name as his father, exactly the same name with no variation. Adding a middle name for a child of a father with no middle name removes the possibility of naming that child as a 'junior'.John Wesley Jones cannot be John Wesley Jones, Jr. if his father is named simply John Jones.
jim's real son
If the son's name is exactly the same as his father's (first, middle and last) then he may be called "Junior", or he could use "the Second" if he prefers. There is no requirement that he use either suffix.