|
Is this short for Jackson? Like The Sons of Anarchy? LOL
I don't like it, but to each her own. If you like the name, you don't need my approval, do you? |
| SONS OF ANARCHY. MOTORCYCLE THUG. |
No, my children have royalty-of-England names. Isn't 6:31 am too early to be so nasty? |
I don't understand any sentence constructed like "I know X name is popular BUT..." Popular is good. Most people want to give popular names to their children. Casting about for obscurity doesn't make your snowflake special and unique. That said, Jax isn't any good. Mostly because it's not actually a name. |
I never understand this "not actually a name" argument. If your name is Jax, then Jax is actually a name. And the fact is that there are people whose name is Jax. It was ranked #223 in 2013. Javier was #222; Myles was #224. |
| My son is Jack and before he was born I though it would be a cute nickname (Jax). Never actually ended up calling him that though. |
That's funny because I know a Jaxon Dean! He is frequently called Jax. |
|
Jackson is overused.
Jaxen is trashy. Jax? What is wrong with you? |
So original !
|
|
I always thought Jack was a nickname for John. Could Jax be a nickname for John, too? Then he would have a more formal name for resumes, etc.
Or you could do something like James Xavier with the nickname Jax. That would be nice. But just Jax could be limiting later on. |
| You should watch a few episodes of Vanderpump rules. |
It's not even in the SSA database prior to 2005. Sons of Anarchy debuted in 2008. It's a nickname of a fictional character, and has grown in popularity since then. But it's not actually a name. It doesn't mean anything except "nickname for a fictional character on the television show Sons of Anarchy." |
. OP here. I like this. Thanks for the suggestion! |
So your definition of a name is "something that means something"? Do you consider Apple a name? How about Comfort or Delight -- are those names? How about John -- what does that mean? |
Well, Apple definitely means something -- it's a fruit. Comfort and Delight have definitions as well, although, no, I don't consider them "names." John is Biblical. It means Grace or Mercy of the Lord. Jax isn't anything. Except maybe a misspelling of the toy you pick up when you bounce a little rubber ball. |