usage - "Mom and Dad" vs "Dad and Mom"
I'm curious if the order implies anything here. I'm pretty sure "Mom and Dad" is standard in English. The issue was hard for me to google, so I'm asking it here:
Is using "Dad" before "Mom" incorrect, or is it just not often seen/bad practice? I see both, but "Mom and Dad" is far more prevalent.
Edit: What puzzles me is that usually masculine comes before feminine. The given umich article on word order is quite instructive, and I have yet to read all of it. In Chinese and I think Spanish, the father comes first usually.
Now that I think of it, I think German features "Mutter & Vater" more often. Probably carried over into English.
Edit 2: Some power googling reveals that "Mom and Dad" is far more prevalent during 2005-2013.
It can make a difference though, as in an example I found: "I became my girls’ Dad and Mom when one was four years, the other three months old." This is quite clearly in the voice of the father, as shown here.
Answer
Word collocation. Words get paired and their order becomes fixed. Also known as irreversible binomials, binomials and Siamese twins.
It's like bread and butter. You never say those words the other way round, do you?
Likewise:
Ladies and Gentlemen
Mum and Dad
cats and dogs
black and white
backwards and forwards
thunder and lightning
peace and quiet
Some pair words can be joined with "or" for instance
rain or shine
now or never
sooner or later
right or wrong
more or less
all or nothing
Interestingly, in Italian the word order is sometimes the reverse:
bianco e nero (white and black)
cani e gatti (dogs and cats)
avanti e dietro (forwards and backwards)
vivo o morte (alive or dead, which if you think about it, makes more sense.)
but always
- mamma e papà (mum and dad)
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