But that’s not the only reason why Mac went for the computer jargon. Pascual says having unique names has been a tradition in his family and his own name is short for Macaroni 85. Secondly, His sister’s official name is Spaghetti 88. HTML was born at the Bulacan Medical Mission Group Cooperative Hospital, weighing 4.9 pounds, according to reports. Furthermore, He was introduced to the world by his aunt Sincerely Pascual, who shared a picture on Facebook and wrote: “Welcome to the world HTML”
Memes and Jokes on Social Media:
Moreover, The post has now garnered thousands of likes and shares. It has also inspired a slew of jokes and memes from social media users. A user wrote, ” “Results-based management system” while others suggested “JavaScript” or “Cascading Style Sheets” (CSS).” Furthermore, While many users joked about the name, some said it could lead to the child being bullied at school. “In the future, he could be targeted by bullies and ridiculed,” a user wrote.
I think it depends on the content, and how you’re presenting categories. I’m a fan of having child categories, like:
Web Design (parent)
-Accessibility
-CSS
-HTML— Eric Karkovack (@karks88) June 8, 2021
‘HYPERTEXT MARKUP LANGUAGE R. PASCUAL’ 👶
LOOK: Meet HTML, the uniquely-named newborn baby from Bulacan. The child’s name was inspired by the father’s web developer job.
Photo courtesy of Sincerely Pascual pic.twitter.com/jmCp6kBJYJ
— Rappler (@rapplerdotcom) June 11, 2021
Talking about unique baby names, no other name is more famous than Tesla and Space X CEO Elon Musk and his wife Grimes legally named their son X Æ A-XII in 2020. However, the baby’s original name ‘X Æ A-12’ had left netizens baffled as many scrambled to decode the meaning. The new name suggested the couple compromised and altered some of the alphabets and characters slightly from the original in order to comply with California Law.
Legal Issues due to Name:
The couple had to deal with some legal issues after a family attorney had said that if Musk and Grimes filled out the birth certificate of their child ‘with odd numbers, dashes, and symbols’, it would be rejected in California. Simply put, the couple wasn’t allowed to use numbers, special signs of symbols in their baby’s name. The couple had to let go of the ‘Æ A-12’ part and change the name to ‘AE A-XII’.