It was perhaps because the schoolboy's mannerisms resembled that of a marching platoon ('polton' in Bengali), that India's 13th president, who demits office later this month, came to be fondly known as 'Poltu'.
"His father and elder sister Annapurna Devi started calling him Poltu," recalls journalist and long time friend Jayanta Ghosal, who has known Mukherjee since 1985.
As the first citizen prepares to say farewell to public life, those schoolboy days might be a faint memory, but the Poltu story is one that will strike a chord with families across the country.
Rabindranath Tagore, for instance, was fondly called Robi, Satyajit Ray , was widely known as Manik or Manik-da, while Bengali superstar Prosenjit Chatterjee is called Bumba. The late West Bengal chief minister, Siddharth Shankar Ray -- said to be one of the architects of The Emergency -- was called Manu.
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For most Indians, choosing what's called a "proper name" is an elaborate process, involving many hours of discussions and weeks of thumbing through the pages of name books to analyse meaning and provenance of each suggestion. In some cases, numerology and astrology are called into play to ensure that the name is propitious.
The easiest and obvious thing to do for most people is to abbreviate an individual's proper name, says Kamna Chibber, head of Mental Health at Fortis Healthcare.
So, Manish becomes Monu and Pooja becomes Pooh.
"Nicknames are a representation of affection. Choices of nicknames tend to vary with people as different factors are taken into account when settling on a nickname," Chibber told PTI.
Many names have a back story.
Bollywood actress Karisma Kapoor, for instance, is known as Lolo by friends, family - and gossip columnists - apparently after her mother's favourite, Italian star Gina Lollobrigida.
Chintu it was, and Chintu it still is.
Then, there's former cricketer Rahul Dravid who was affectionately named "Jammy" by friends and colleagues, because his father worked in the Kissan Jam factory.
But nicknames are not always about warmth and affection, they can often be cruel too.
Many indigenous names, says sociologist Sanjay Srivastava, are often based on a person's physical or mental attributes -- colour and body shape.
Many, particularly during the growing up years in school, have had the misfortune of being called 'Haddi' or 'Beedi' for having a lean body type. While the body type might change over the years, the nickname stays on!
Sonam Kapoor is apparently called giraffe by her father for being tall. Bipasha Basu was named Bonnie, because she was round and plump as a baby.
It is disturbing to note how certain choices for nicknames, particularly those that take after a certain flaw of an individual, indicate the "harshness of the Indian society", says Srivastava.
"My parents called me China, or Chai-na, which in Bengali means 'We don't want'. I was another girl child born to them, and they wanted a son," she told the employer.
An increasing trend of "westernised" names among Indians, with a Bobby or a Dolly in almost every household, particularly in Northern India is evident, Srivastava adds.
So yes, there is plenty in a name, notwithstanding what Shakespeare said.