Ada/Adah is a standalone name, very popular in the end of the 19th century. |
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Cara
Paige Johanna Autumn Lindsay Sasha Natalie |
Understood, but Ava and Addison and variations are popular, so Ada might not seem as unused as it might otherwise. |
| Ada is a name. It's not Ava or Addie. |
Give some thought to the assumptions wrapped up in that statement. "Any" playground, really? |
| Why is there such an obsession with finding “unused names”? Who cares? |
you do you, ok? some people disliked being one of many with the same name in every class and workplace since they were young. we all have our reasons for choosing the names we do for our children. If you want to name your kid Isabelle Emma Ava Lastname, go right ahead |
And? Ada and Ava sound the same when yelled across a playground. Good luck with your unused name. |
So is Laura, which they like. |
OP specified two-syllables. |
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Michelle
Estelle Katherine Shannon |
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I'm a teacher. Last year I had a student called Mary, and the name really few on me.
This is the only Mary I encountered among students in 14 years, so really is underused now. |
actually, they said their last name is two syllables |
I'm a late 70s Shannon There were a TON of us (on the East Coast, at least). It was the go to Irish name at the time But it is definitely not being used much now. My 14 year old has a friend named Shannon from her middle school, and that is the first time I have heard it used in her classes. |
I do. I have the most common name of my generation and it’s awful. |