Previous poster here again--my post should have read "age 4 or YOUNGER", not older |
| Oh my God, Matthew. How completely unoriginal. As are Mark, Luke, and John. Where in heaven did so many people get the insane idea that this is the name they should pick? Just because a famous celebrity hangs out with someone by that name, people shouldn't take his preferences as gospel. |
No, I'm not defensive, just honestly curious why it bothers people. My DD's name is not popular, but if it had been we would still have used it. We chose her name because it was meaningful to us (it was my grandmother's name), not based on naming trends. |
| I think it's more tragic when parents pick the fugliest name they can think of in an effort to be different. I'll take Emma over Hortense any day. |
| Hm, I thought my son's name was super popular but it's ranked #347 for the year he was born. It's a super common name though. Live and learn. |
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I have an Evelyn. Her name was barely in the top ten the year she was born but it was ranked 24th last year. I also have four friends that have daughters named Evelyn.
We were definitely ahead of the pack but when she gets into the work place I can see her going by Evelyn Jones or Evelyn J. In the 90s I worked in a store with about 10 female employees. 3 of them were named Michelle and they all worked in the same department. |
Yes! This. If you love the name, use it. Who cares how popular the name is? I know several Jennifer's my age and each one is unique as a person. I love the names Emma or Sophia or Hannah. Original name ... So what? |
Ooops. I meant her name was hardly in the top 100. She is ten. |
Are there multiple spellings? How popular is it now? |
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"So, I don't understand your point? You'd deliberately give your child an uncommon name? Why would you do that to a child? "
Also don't understand OP's point. |
Love Owen! |
| Lol, some of you actuall believe you are trendsetters. We're all subject to the strange and powerful nature of suggestion as a pp described. You just happened to jump on it early; you're an early adopter, not a trendsetter. Ugh, this is so dumb (and my kid has a beautiful, classic name, not on the op's list, but nonetheless in the same vein, because beautiful classic names are in. And I like them!) |
It's Philip. Still in the 300s |
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When we picked our kids names, we picked names we liked. We used a name for DD that we had picked several years before, without even looking at a list. It just happened not to be very common. When it was time to name DC 2 (a boy) we had lots of trouble. I just wasn't crazy about most boy names and wanted something that went with DD name. My husband is the one that picked DS name and he did it out of a book. Again, it turned out to not be very common.
Both are more common today then when the kids were born, but I think DD is still no higher than 80s and DS is in the 200s. |
Yes!! +1. I think there is a resurgence of "classic" names that people seem to like because they are "different" but are actually totally ugly. Matilda? Gertude? Horrible. |