No, a husband should not call other woman by the pet names given to his wife. Such a sharing of pet names is considered a sign of non-exclusivity, perhaps even adultery. Certainly the sharing devalues the importance of the pet name to all addressed by it.
Get your husband to cheat on you, then you will be even and you can both call each other names.
texting each other and calling their names out loud
you should either walk away or cheek the fat kid about his weight and make him feel bad about himself so he doesn't call you names anymore or you could make friends with them and eventually get them to stop calling you names or just hit them depending on what type of person you are.
Your sister's daughter is your niece and you are either her aunt or her uncle. The English language has no term for your niece's husband, other than calling him "niece's husband."
Definitely yes
Yes, it still hurts but it just means you guys love each other enough to know it wont do any real damage, and only people that know each other should playfuly call each other names.
Don't involve other people into this matter. First and foremost, you need to sit down and talk with your husband. You are right- a female coworker calling your husband for something other than business, especially in the middle of the night, especially drunk, is certainly not alright. You don't have to be accusing, but you do need to make it clear to him how you feel about it. He is the one she is calling. He needs to be the one to tell her to stop.
Yes. If your significant other demeans you by calling you hypercritical or offensive names, that could be interpreted as emotional abuse.
Discuss it with your husband to decide if brother should be asked to leave; or if you are somewhere other than your home, if you and your husband should leave. No one has the right to interfere with your relationship with your husband (other than an abusive situation).
Really only he can answer this for you and you should calmly ask him why and tell him how it makes you feel. If he cannot be with just one girl and have respect for her by not calling other women then he should not be dating at this time.
It depends on the preference of the couple. Some women prefer to be referred to by their husbands' names... others detest it. For a generic letter where you don't know the couple, choose the option without the husband's name. There are other issues as well. Do you know that the husband goes by Jim? If you are uncertain of a nickname, use the formal first name. If you know the couple, and the wife's name, it is perfectly acceptable to address a letter to Sally and Jim Smith. That would avoid the issue of calling her by the husband's name.
Sure. Most young children do some name calling at one point or another. It is important to note that there is both a positive and a negative form of name calling. Children may call each other names such as "captain" or "champ" to indicate amazement towards the others' abilities to perform in some field, like sports. Then there is negative name calling, which is the undesired form. It is done out of jealousy, spite and similar motivations to mock the other child. Negative name calling should be discouraged by responsible parents.