hey, my son's name made the list! awesome! i actually haven't seen my future daughter's name pop up yet ... interesting.
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I dislike the names Jacob/Jake, Keegan, Lucas/Luke (why would you want a nickname that rhymes with puke?), Cooper
I don't mind the name Aiden, but all the Braiden, Jaiden, etc. names are obnoxious. The girl names I've heard lately that I've disliked have been Beatrice, Hazel, Eloise, Brielle, the Isabella variations, Adalynn, Kaylee My last name is one of the popular last names as first names. I actually like the trend, but am getting tired of how many people immediately call our son by our last name. |
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Keegan's a good one...I know 2 and really can't stand it.
Also not a fan of Mason, Landon, etc. Or the trying too hard names like Asher, Bennett, and Griffin. |
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The 'Aden names don't bother me, they're just this generation's version of Kevin, Brian, Brandon, etc.
Cole and Colton are two names I don't really like. They just have a harsh sound I don't care for. |
Okay, maybe you're right about Germans, but then why don't other cultures/countries go back to their roots to name their kids (Swedish, Norwegian, Austrian, French, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Egyptian, etc...)? It seems it is only Irish names that are trendy enough to go back to to name your babies. Maybe it's just my perception? |
We couldn't give our children Irish first names because of their Korean last name. Declan Cho or Eimmer Kim just aren't names that flow. |
Curious: Did you feel the need to give them traditional Korean names? |
No, but we didn't go too Ethnic with the first names. |
No, the first person was right--it's pronounced Ee-fa. Had an Aoife roommate while living in Ireland. It's super common over there. Good luck to anyone with that name here.
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I know plenty of Italians/people with Italian heritage that have chosen Italian names for their kids. I know a Giovanni, Gia, Giovanna, Claudia, Gabriella, Francesca. Also, I know LOTS of hispanic, Ukrainian and Polish people that have given their kids traditional names - Francisco, Eduardo, Aracely, etc. and Olga, Natalia, Ivan, etc. |
| Michaela/Mickaela/Mackayla is not one of the trendy "Mck" names for girls and shouldn't be lumped in with McKenna and McKenzie and McKennon and that ilk. It's a Hebrew names that goes back centuries. |
After this post I googled the names plus the word pronunciation, and one of the first entries that popped up was a site with an audio clip of pronunciations. Cool. Aoife almost sounded like Effuck, with a soft ck sound at the end of the name, like a whispered "fuck" at the end. I played it a couple of times to see if I was hearing it correctly. |
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Here's the link to the audio on Aoife.
http://inogolo.com/pronunciation/Aoife |
I think Ireland has just been trendy lately. Maybe started with Riverdance. |
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Funny, people in the D.C. area really believe only certain cultures are recent immigrants. How truly stupid, beyond ignorant.
Germans and Italians were treated HORRIBLY when they came to this country after WWII. They were stripped of their heritage and language in a way that would NEVER be tolerated today. The rest of the population has no idea the prejudice and hate they went through; especially the current immigrants. The past immigrants were given nothing. Open your eyes a bit more. And expand your history to reach beyond the southern version of events of the Civil War. You'll be enlightened beyond your "Ashleys" and "Jacks". |