Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think people on this thread are uncomfortable with the notion that OP is not Jewish but wants to name her daughter a name that screams Judaism. Would they have this reaction to a thread entitled "Christina or Kristina?" I think not. They wouldn't give a damn whether OP was living a Christ-centered life. But let a non-Jew name her daughter Tzipporah and everyone goes apeshit.
I'm one of the PPs you are calling out, and I would also find it surprising to meet a Jewish person named Christina, for the same reasons. I don't understand why one PP thinks it's stupid to assume that someone named Tziporah probably comes from an orthodox family. Statistically I'd guess it's quite likely (or maybe a very religious Christian family, I'm not as familiar with that).
Anonymous wrote:I think people on this thread are uncomfortable with the notion that OP is not Jewish but wants to name her daughter a name that screams Judaism. Would they have this reaction to a thread entitled "Christina or Kristina?" I think not. They wouldn't give a damn whether OP was living a Christ-centered life. But let a non-Jew name her daughter Tzipporah and everyone goes apeshit.
Anonymous wrote:I think people on this thread are uncomfortable with the notion that OP is not Jewish but wants to name her daughter a name that screams Judaism. Would they have this reaction to a thread entitled "Christina or Kristina?" I think not. They wouldn't give a damn whether OP was living a Christ-centered life. But let a non-Jew name her daughter Tzipporah and everyone goes apeshit.
Anonymous wrote:I'm whitey whitey white and I can completely understand why a black American might not want to use a traditional European name. Not so hard to understand.
OP is doing something both similar and dissimilar. She's honoring a cultural connection. (As opposed to choosing not to align with a cultural name that wouldn't have applied to one's family but for the intervention of slavery.)
All good.
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."

I don't understand how the T is pronounced. I pronounce "tsunami" like "sue-nah-me." Is that wrong?
google found me this page, which (oddly to me) makes it sound as though in American English the t is silent, but in British English it is not--
http://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/pronunciation/english/tsunami
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how the T is pronounced. I pronounce "tsunami" like "sue-nah-me." Is that wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tzipora
I look at Tzipora and think it's probably a Hebrew name. I look at Zipora and think it's something you or possibly a pharmaceutical company made up. Or maybe a competitor to Zipcar?
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how the T is pronounced. I pronounce "tsunami" like "sue-nah-me." Is that wrong?