Well, thank you. There's no special meaning to it, but like with everything, there's a story behind it. It's not a particularly interesting one, though.
To make it short, it's just 'burned' with a meaningless suffix. Some english speakers like to break it into two parts ("Burn, Eddi") but that's not what it means.
To make it long...
Back in 2003 or 2004 I decided to pick up a more persistent nick to represent myself on the Internet. At first, it was burned_out (or a variation of that without the underscore). Soon it morphed to just burned, which obviously was taken in most places, so I replaced the e with a 3. Some time after that I decided to change it to Burneddi, basically just adding the 'di' to it. I guess this transition could be compared to a dutchman adding a 'ji' or a 'je' after their nicks.
lol wut?
But it's not impossible, and it's nothing that hasn't been done before.
To make it short, it's just 'burned' with a meaningless suffix. Some english speakers like to break it into two parts ("Burn, Eddi") but that's not what it means.
To make it long...
Back in 2003 or 2004 I decided to pick up a more persistent nick to represent myself on the Internet. At first, it was burned_out (or a variation of that without the underscore). Soon it morphed to just burned, which obviously was taken in most places, so I replaced the e with a 3. Some time after that I decided to change it to Burneddi, basically just adding the 'di' to it. I guess this transition could be compared to a dutchman adding a 'ji' or a 'je' after their nicks.
k?