Anonymous wrote:This might be one of the most asinine threads ever conceived on DCUM.
Carry on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i dont quite understand this post.... its seems a bit judgmental. i mean, i am upper middle and i can easily name my baby "Tiffany" or "Mykelti" (Sister wives anyone?), or even "Aqualykeshia" (i wouldn't but im just saying) but even if I was extremely low class I could name my kid any name I chose as well. Whether that name be Anna, or Cynthia or Syhniqua. Beyonce and Jay Z definitly are NOT low class (im talking socioeconomic, because im sure someone will have something to say about their "class" in other areas) and they just named their kid "Blue Ivy". I mean this thread makes it seem like when people look for a baby name they are asked about their HHI and then are given a book of acceptable names based off of their economic status.
Yup, it's absolutely judgmental.
Anonymous wrote:i dont quite understand this post.... its seems a bit judgmental. i mean, i am upper middle and i can easily name my baby "Tiffany" or "Mykelti" (Sister wives anyone?), or even "Aqualykeshia" (i wouldn't but im just saying) but even if I was extremely low class I could name my kid any name I chose as well. Whether that name be Anna, or Cynthia or Syhniqua. Beyonce and Jay Z definitly are NOT low class (im talking socioeconomic, because im sure someone will have something to say about their "class" in other areas) and they just named their kid "Blue Ivy". I mean this thread makes it seem like when people look for a baby name they are asked about their HHI and then are given a book of acceptable names based off of their economic status.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when you say names with a "Y" are you talking about the full name having a y, or do nicknames count too...
For example, Elizabeth does not have a y, but "Betty" does...so is a girl named Elizabeth not classy if she goes by Betty...or is she only not classy if her name is actually Betty--on her birth certificate and everything?
I know someone who just named her daughter Betty. As far as I can tell that is her name, not a nickname... Ewww, I feel so bad that in 20 years she will be sidled with Betty for a name.
I have a 100 yo great grandmother named Bette (pronounced Betty), her actual name. I don't see anything wrong with it. Is Bette classier than Betty? Bette Davis comes to mind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Mary is a little low class. The first famous Mary gave birth in a barn. You can't really get any lower class than that.
Signed,
Mary
Actually, you can't get a much higher name than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My name is Christina but people who don't know me well call me Christine. I hate that. "Christine" sounds like trailer trash. The "a" make ALL the difference.![]()
And what about Khrystyna? OMG.
Christina sounds Italian or Latina to me. A little too frou frou for my personal tastes. Like your sister might be named Maria and you might live in The West Side Story.
Christine sounds Anglo/Irish or American to me.
Christina here. Sorry to dash your preconceptions about my name. Totally Anglo/Germanic. Upper middle class. My sister's name is Gretchen of all things.
But Christina is pretty much a universal (well, at least Western) name, for obvious reasons. It means "Anointed by Christ."
The opposite here - Christine who gets called Christina all the time. I don't mind it that much, because I happen to like both names, but I do correct people.
My name doesn't sound trashy to me, but then I don't hang out at trailer parks, so what do I know. 8)
Of the two, Christine has been the most common variant in the UK and Germany (even France), so I don't agree that Christina is the Anglo-Germanic one.
) but even if I was extremely low class I could name my kid any name I chose as well. Whether that name be Anna, or Cynthia or Syhniqua. Beyonce and Jay Z definitly are NOT low class (im talking socioeconomic, because im sure someone will have something to say about their "class" in other areas) and they just named their kid "Blue Ivy". I mean this thread makes it seem like when people look for a baby name they are asked about their HHI and then are given a book of acceptable names based off of their economic status. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So when you say names with a "Y" are you talking about the full name having a y, or do nicknames count too...
For example, Elizabeth does not have a y, but "Betty" does...so is a girl named Elizabeth not classy if she goes by Betty...or is she only not classy if her name is actually Betty--on her birth certificate and everything?
I know someone who just named her daughter Betty. As far as I can tell that is her name, not a nickname... Ewww, I feel so bad that in 20 years she will be sidled with Betty for a name.