It appears in all our records as Og.
Not a patient, so I can post it----I ran across someone named Precious Love. Honest to Og.
<Hangs head>I’m sorry. I think I’ve learned my lesson now…
May I ask his nationality or heritage? I’m wondering if it’s a common name in the Netherlands, or something. Their version of John or Michael, as it were.
It’s not enough to have learned the lesson. You must now carry the message!
Further study has shown that Og occasionally used the alias Otis G. Nonetheless, his first name is designated as Og in our system.
He appears to be generic American by birth, and his surname is not real consistant with Nederlander ancestry (and I would probably know, my last name being Mercotijn back in the oude dorp).
I found that cite. Here it is.
Jim
Could his real name be Otis G. and he goes by Og as his alias/nickname?
Did ya have to bandage his knuckles? Huh? Did ya? DID ya? Huh?
I have not yet ruled out this tentative hypothesis. Certainly our system (and the court system) thinks of him as Og. More information will be gathered. But, it being a holiday tomorrow, I don’t expect to have more data until next week, at the earliest.
If I talked about his knuckles, then that would be telling, wouldn’t it?
It’s just not fair. Someone who goes by the names Otis AND Og? Those are just about the two greatest names ever.
Maybe you can call him “The Inmate Formerly Known as Og” and no one will be the wiser!
Otis, my man!
[/NLAH]
Maybe Og was OG, which sounds vaguely gangsterish. What up, G dawg?
Will your next printing of business cards have the addition : Physician to the Gods ?
Perusal of public court records shows that he’s on occasion referred to as Otis G. or O. G.
To be precise,
two times he’s Og,
two times he’s OG,
once he’s O G,
once he’s O. G. ,
three times he’s Otis G, and
once he’s Otis.
Out of 10 court cases.
Apart frim its stellar career as the name of the primitive Caveman God of the SDMB, the deity too thick-headed to be driven insane by Cthulhu… Og is also a fairly common name in someplace Scandinavian like Iceland, isn’t it?
Though in QtM’s case, it looks like an initialism.
I can’t decide which name I’d prefer to go by: Otis, Og, or Oh Gee!
I knew someone named Candy Love. It was her married name. Just goes to show ya, if you marry a guy who’ll give you an honest-to-Og stripper name, it must be Love.
I once taught guitar to a man with the last name Kane. He named his daughter, Candace. Oh the humanity.
An ex-boss of mine was an Army officer with a 10-letter surname. When she married a man named Dixon, she griped that the hyphenated name wouldn’t fit on her uniform. I asked her if she’d rather have a shorter maiden name, say, Mason?
She seemed comforted.
Did you thank Og? Or, better yet, did Og thank you?