
Actually, she’s a doctor for the rest of her life and can change her name if she likes. Apparently, you will always be narrow-minded. |
Love Polly and Poppy |
Would you want that name? I would not. |
😁 |
Right???? I am cracking up about people who are so contrarian they are talking up Bambi as a name. Great ladies. Name your kid Bambi then. Better yet change your own name. Then you'll be super unforgettable. |
I am cracking up at people who think the names on OP’s list are not real names and assume a woman is stupid based on her first name. |
My kids call their grampa Poppy so that would be out for me! |
Ok. Then do as suggested and name your kid whatever you feel like. It's not going to change how many people see these names. (Bambi is an extreme example, by the way.) What I think is insane is coming on a site like this to get people's opinions and then being mad at what people say. Why ask then? Don't crowdsource your kid's future name on an anonymous website if you don't want to hear what people really think. Even Bambi could have figured that one out. |
I'm not OP and I don't think OP has been getting mad at the negative opinions on the thread. And I'm not even mad. My name isn't Bambi or Poppy or anything like that, nor do my kids have names like that. But I see this opinion on name threads all the time and I think it's ridiculous. There are lots and lots of adults who have names people deem cutesy or frivolous. I'm a child of the 80s and I grew up with Stephanie and Tiffany and Jenny. Stephanie is a corporate executive, Tiffany is a professor at an Ivy, and Jenny is a diplomat. I used to work for a woman named Dot who ran a research division at Fortune 500 company. All of these are names that someone or other has told me are dumb, cutesy, and unserious. All those women are serious, competent professionals who are well-respected by their colleagues and well-liked by friends and family. It's just a tired, often misogynist argument that relies on the idea that names that are feminine, sweet, or fun automatically can't be taken seriously. It's not reality and it's also boring AF. |
I don't think this is a male/female issue. Ask Danny who started going by Dan and Bobby who switched to Robert or Bob and so on. It's the same thing with men's names. People are suggesting give kids options for when they are older which is good advice. |
Stephanie and Tiffany are real names. Jenny is a nickname for Jennifer. Dot is a nickname for Dorothy or Dorothea. |
Me, too. |
I actually know very few people of either gender who went by a nick name like Danny or Bobby or Jenny or Becky or Allie as a kid who switched to using a more "adult" version later in life. And I know tons of adults with names like that including people who are very high level in their profession. To me the takeaway is not that you have to give kids a longer, more formal name, but that you should try to raise kids who are comfortable in their own skin and won't fret about changing their name from their nickname so that people will take them seriously after college. |
Jenny or Jemnie was originally a standalone name or a nickname for Jane. Jennifer came into fashion from the actress Jennifer Jones. |
But Jenny doesn't go by Jennifer professionally. Dot doesn't go by Dorothy. It doesn't matter if these people have longer names or if their name is just the "nickname" version. They go by the shortened name, it's their name. BTW I've met lots of people who have names you would deem a "nickname" of a longer name. I know adults with the given names Dani, Timmy, Billy, Jim, and Suzie. Not Danielle, Timothy, William, James, and Susan. People have been using nicknames as "real" names for centuries. It's where a lot of names you now consider "classic" came from. |