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I have 2 sisters I grew up with, and one brother (same dad, different mom). I refer to my brother as my half brother, more because I hardly know him. DNA-wise, we are siblings, but relationship wise, I have seen him once since he was 4. It doesn't seem right to include him in the same phrase with my two sisters that I share the same parents with because we are all so close.
If the situation were reversed, and my (half) brother and I grew up in the same house, it would be different for me, and I would call him my brother. I am sure my step sister (don't share either parent, her mom is my step mom, but she lives with my half brother...confusing huh?) calls him her brother, even though they don't share parents at all.
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Diamond Enthusiast


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Cool! I agree with all of this!  My brother, sister and I all shared the same mother, but all had different fathers. We were brother and sisters. Period. They had "half-siblings" whom they didn't even know, raised by their Dads. Bears out all that's been said. I had a "step-sister": L lived with my step-mother and called her "Mom." No adoption. ( L was already grown when they met.) I have always thought of L's daughter as my niece.  Now - my husband has a "half-brother" and a "half-sister" whom he "half-claims." Weren't raised together. When he claims them, they're his "brother" and "sister." (But if he doesn't claim them, he gets to be oldest!  ) BTW - M-W defines "sibling" as: "one of two or more individuals having one common parent" (Similar definition from Webster's Collegiate Dictionary.) Doesn't mention "half." 
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| Posts: 6323 | Location: LA (Lower Alabama) USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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Diamond Enthusiast

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I agree with everything said here. We're right now working on a family geneaology for my husband's family, and there are a number of adoptions and remarriages. For him, even though his mother remarried when he was 10, he calls his stepfather his dad (but calls him by his first name to him). He refers to his biological father only by his name, rarely as "my father", never "dad". His half sister is just his sister, and his adopted sister is just his sister, even though he's not close with the adopted one, but his half sister is. His adopted aunt's kids are his cousins, as is the child of his uncle's second wife from her first marriage. I agree, its all on how you look at them.
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| Posts: 3065 | Location: A place with palm trees and sunshine! | Registered: 03-17-03 |    |
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Getting along with half brothers or sisters has nothing to do with relationships whether you or close or not. We have nothing to do with who our parents are or who our sisters and brothers are. Titles of brother, sister, mother or father is not earned. It was already predestined. Everybody seems to want to put God out of our creation. Well, it cannot be done. I'm tired of hearing people talk about mother nature and the man upstairs, We need to ask God how we can Love our sisters and our brothers whether we are related or not, how to love our fellowman each day, especially how to love the ones we hate or don't like. I am 1 of 11 brothers and sisters the 2 oldest have a different father. We have always considered them our brother and sister because we came from the same womb. Now, after having so many brothers and sisters I never will understand why I am the most hated, but God is helping me to cope with it. I was thrown out of the house like yesterday's garbage. Everybody has a place to live except me. I gave up my home to stay with my mom who is 83 yrs. old, but I have never felt like I was a part of her and my dad sexually molested me so I hope this helps someone because God let me know that when mother/father forsake you he will take you up and these were my biological parents and sisters and brothers.
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| Posts: 1 | Location: St. Louis, MO | Registered: 05-14-08 |    |
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