Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The pronunciation of Barack is intuitive for your typical American-English speaker. A name with a silent T is complete different.
I'm mortified for people who try to advertise their own special unique cre8tivitee by what they name their poor kids.
Can you pronounce tsunami? Adding a t isn't cre8tive, it's the correct transliteration and changes pronunciation slightly.
OP said the reason she liked the name was because it was fun and funky like their family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The pronunciation of Barack is intuitive for your typical American-English speaker. A name with a silent T is complete different.
I'm mortified for people who try to advertise their own special unique cre8tivitee by what they name their poor kids.
Can you pronounce tsunami? Adding a t isn't cre8tive, it's the correct transliteration and changes pronunciation slightly.
Anonymous wrote:The pronunciation of Barack is intuitive for your typical American-English speaker. A name with a silent T is complete different.
I'm mortified for people who try to advertise their own special unique cre8tivitee by what they name their poor kids.
I think if you are going with a Biblical name, you should use the Biblical spelling and not some alternate spelling.
OP can't use the biblical spelling, because the bible isn't written in English, or even in the Roman alphabet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Unnecessary pain"? Good grief.
Maybe in DCUMland, where everybody is named Liam or Caroline. But not in real actual life.
Op- this is funny. I grew up in the DC area and you should've heard roll call at school. There is no way any of the names we consider would be scarring. Hello, we do live in a country where the Potus is named Barack. Perhaps it was not the easiest name for him growing up, but fear of difference is not something that would hold is back from choosing a non-Anglo name.
Anonymous wrote:The pronunciation of Barack is intuitive for your typical American-English speaker. A name with a silent T is complete different.
I'm mortified for people who try to advertise their own special unique cre8tivitee by what they name their poor kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shorter PPs: "I wouldn't name my kid this, so you shouldn't either."
No...more like "if I met someone with this name, I might make incorrect assumptions about them and also have difficulty pronouncing it. I think that most people will react similarly and that this name will therefore not serve your child well."
Shorter PP: "This name confuses me, so it will confuse other people., so you shouldn't use it."
Yep. Clearly the most important consideration in naming YOUR OWN children should be the effect the name will have on others.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^agree with two p's. I don't have any opinion about the silent T, but the single p is reminiscent of Ziploc.
OP- I like the single P because I see zipper with a double P! I don't like the regular Zipporah spelling because it makes the name a lot longer than my other kids' names.
Anonymous wrote:"Unnecessary pain"? Good grief.
Maybe in DCUMland, where everybody is named Liam or Caroline. But not in real actual life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shorter PPs: "I wouldn't name my kid this, so you shouldn't either."
No...more like "if I met someone with this name, I might make incorrect assumptions about them and also have difficulty pronouncing it. I think that most people will react similarly and that this name will therefore not serve your child well."
Shorter PP: "This name confuses me, so it will confuse other people., so you shouldn't use it."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Shorter PPs: "I wouldn't name my kid this, so you shouldn't either."
No...more like "if I met someone with this name, I might make incorrect assumptions about them and also have difficulty pronouncing it. I think that most people will react similarly and that this name will therefore not serve your child well."