No, there is no term in the English language for this occurrence.
Double first cousins arise when two siblings reproduce with another set of siblings and the resulting children are related to each other through both parents' families. Double first cousins share both sets of grandparents in common and have double the degree of consanguinity than ordinary first cousins. Double second cousins would be the children of double first cousins. Two cousins are removed when they are are a different number of generations from their shared ancestor. When that difference is one generation, they are once removed. For example, if Joe and Ethyl are first cousins and Ethyl has a son named Bob, then Joe and Bob are first cousins once removed. (But Bob and any of Joe's children are second cousins.) If Bob has a daughter named Mary, Joe and Mary are first cousins, twice removed, because they are two generations separated from each other.
That is called a "double standard".
After a verdict has been rendered in the case, no. It is called double jeapordy, and is prohibited (in the US).
It is called "hitting for the cycle".
Scott Cousins played in 18 games at center field for the Miami Marlins in 2012, starting in 8 of them. He played for a total of 273 outs, equivalent to 10.11 9-inning games. He made 29 putouts, had no assists, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per 9-inning game. He had no double plays.
First cousins born on the same day are called "double first cousins." This term is used when two siblings from one family have children with two siblings from another family, resulting in their children sharing both sets of grandparents. Double first cousins share a higher percentage of genetic material than typical first cousins.
It occurs when two siblings in one family marry two siblings in another family. An example would be .... Sally and Sue Smith are sisters. Joe and John Doe are brothers. Sally married Joe...they have a child Rick, Sue marries John and they have a child Mary. Mary and Rick are double first cousins. Because they are related on both sides.
brothers
Yes. Agreed, but to answer more fully, second cousins are from the bloodline of a common great-grandparent. Put another way, Person A and Person B, the second cousins, each have a grandparent who had at least one parent in common. (This might occur if one parent remarried and that couple gave birth to another child). If they had both parents in common, such second cousins are sometimes referred to as "double" second cousins, but most people don't get that technical. Therefore, to be clear, even grandparents who are only half-siblings would still have grandchildren who are second cousins. There is no such thing as a "half-cousin" relationship. Cousin means you are related by blood through a common relative, one - period.
The children of two brothers who marry two sisters are first cousins to each other. Some people like to describe the relationship as "double cousins" since most people have cousin relationships through one parent/sibling pair, and these have it through two such pairs.
Yes. Because your aunt shares only 50% of your father's bloodlines, your cousin would share 25% of your genealogy. Cousins whose parents are full-blooded brother and sister share 50% of their genetic background. There is one exception. That's when two full blooded brothers and/or sisters from one family married two full-blooded brothers and/or sisters from another family, the children are called double cousins because the they share 100% percent of the aunt(s)' and uncle(s)' lineage.
Double cousins? As in one cousin has a child, then another cousin has a child? If that's the case then I'm almostpositive that makes them second or third cousins?
Double first cousins arise when two siblings reproduce with another set of siblings and the resulting children are related to each other through both parents' families. Double first cousins share both sets of grandparents in common and have double the degree of consanguinity than ordinary first cousins. Double second cousins would be the children of double first cousins. Two cousins are removed when they are are a different number of generations from their shared ancestor. When that difference is one generation, they are once removed. For example, if Joe and Ethyl are first cousins and Ethyl has a son named Bob, then Joe and Bob are first cousins once removed. (But Bob and any of Joe's children are second cousins.) If Bob has a daughter named Mary, Joe and Mary are first cousins, twice removed, because they are two generations separated from each other.
No, they are not related. They played twin sisters in the movie "Double Teamed".
Yes, second cousins can legally get married.
Her name is Joss
Let's start small, break this into pieces, and work our way to the big picture; shall we? Okay, a half-cousin is a person who only shares one grandparent with you. For example, if grandpa remarried to another woman and had your half-uncle (the half-brother of your parent), then your half-uncle's children would be your half-cousins. All right, now a double cousin is like when two sisters marry two brothers. You and your double cousin share all of the same grandparents however you have two different parents, without it being incestuous. The only other way you could have all four of the same grandparents is if brothers were having children with their own sisters. But then, I suppose this would be more than double-cousins. Now that we've pieced that together, can you see where I am going with this? A double half-cousin is when a half-sibling on your mother's side marries (or has sex with) a half-sibling on your father's side. The resulting offspring would be your double half-cousin. They are similar to first cousins, yet not quite the same relation. Double cousins share all four grandparents whereas half-cousins only share a single parent. Double half-cousins share two grandparents, like do first cousins, but these two grandparents are on different sides of the family tree; meaning one is paternal and the other is maternal. All these terms are quite semantic though. Family is family, to me. A cousin is a cousin, whether it really is an step-uncle, a neighbor, or an inbred hamster. What you call family (biological or not) should be the most important thing of all, regardless of its labels.