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7/22/2025, 6:12:34 AM
>>511023563
Tucker and Fuller/Vollmer are surnames related to laundry.
In media we see them associated with eternal life and simulation theory.
Black Mirror episode "San Junipero" (SJ) is about a simulated afterlife. It starts at a nightclub called Tucker's.
The Thirteenth Floor / World on a Wire / Simulacron-3 begins with a simulation scientist named Fuller discovering he's in a simulation.
https://surnamedb.com/surname/tucker
>If English it is an occupational surname for a "fuller", a cloth-softener, also known as a "walker".
>Tucker was the usual term in the south-west of England, Walker in the west and north y and "Fuller" in the south-east and east Anglia.
>The derivation is from the Olde English pre 7th Century verb "tucian", meaning "to torment", referring to the softening of the cloth by beating and tramping on it in water.
https://surnamedb.com/surname/fuller
>The work of the fuller was to scour and thicken the raw cloth by beating and trampling it in water, and the word was originally specific to the south of the county, the term in the north being Walker.
Not bad, eh?
Tucker and Fuller/Vollmer are surnames related to laundry.
In media we see them associated with eternal life and simulation theory.
Black Mirror episode "San Junipero" (SJ) is about a simulated afterlife. It starts at a nightclub called Tucker's.
The Thirteenth Floor / World on a Wire / Simulacron-3 begins with a simulation scientist named Fuller discovering he's in a simulation.
https://surnamedb.com/surname/tucker
>If English it is an occupational surname for a "fuller", a cloth-softener, also known as a "walker".
>Tucker was the usual term in the south-west of England, Walker in the west and north y and "Fuller" in the south-east and east Anglia.
>The derivation is from the Olde English pre 7th Century verb "tucian", meaning "to torment", referring to the softening of the cloth by beating and tramping on it in water.
https://surnamedb.com/surname/fuller
>The work of the fuller was to scour and thicken the raw cloth by beating and trampling it in water, and the word was originally specific to the south of the county, the term in the north being Walker.
Not bad, eh?
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