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Mine is MooMoo. My sister was about two when she named her that. It just stuck. MooMoo wasn't thrilled about it at first, but now, years later, she is fine with it. 

drizzle said:tea tea!
Not all the time though, but she's fine with it.
Math Is Hard said:As in "bring me tea, Grandmother!" ?
lisab said:When she got mad, she would chase us around with a nasty fly swatter.
Si élégant.. Oma.. Opa, nice :)micromass said:I call them oma and opa...
drizzle said:Si élégant.. Oma.. Opa, nice :)
philipsteele said:i just call sweeety...
arildno said:I called my maternal grandmother "mormor" (translation: mother-mother); I called my paternal grandmother "farmor" (translation: father-mother).
Not very creative, but in line with Norwegian traditions.
Quiz:
What do you think Norwegians call their paternal&maternal grandfathers?![]()
No, we stop there.micromass said:Wow, that sounds complicated if you do the same thing for the next generations? You'll have a morfarmor, farmormor, mormorfar,...
I do like it...
Correct.drizzle said:Farfar and morfar...
Edit: Don't trust google translate.![]()
arildno said:Correct.
Do you manage this then, without google:
Grand uncle, for example your paternal grandfather's brother?![]()
Not quite.micromass said:brofarfar??