Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter is Veronica and her nickname is Vera (VEH-RA) When she was a baby, Vera seemed to fit her better, but in preschool she wanted to be Veronica. That held until 1st grade when there was a Victoria in her class and they were always getting them confused. Then she went back to Vera and that stuck. She’s in 5th grade and is still going by Vera. Not sure what she’ll do in the future!
I can't figure out how to say this. Not Veer-a? Because VEH-RA seems impossible for me to pronounce.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is Veronica and her nickname is Vera (VEH-RA) When she was a baby, Vera seemed to fit her better, but in preschool she wanted to be Veronica. That held until 1st grade when there was a Victoria in her class and they were always getting them confused. Then she went back to Vera and that stuck. She’s in 5th grade and is still going by Vera. Not sure what she’ll do in the future!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again- how about something like Junior or Trey or Sonny? Anyone have luck with those?
Generally I think these names are widely accepted when the kids are little and then it ends in high school or college. Basically it works when they’re little kids but all the guys I knew who were Jr or Trey switched to their real name in college. I think it feels too cutesy to have people you meet as an adult call you a name that’s basically a diminutive of your dad. These became family nicknames only.
Hmmm... I've met adult Treys and Tripps. Maybe it's more acceptable in the South.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op again- how about something like Junior or Trey or Sonny? Anyone have luck with those?
Generally I think these names are widely accepted when the kids are little and then it ends in high school or college. Basically it works when they’re little kids but all the guys I knew who were Jr or Trey switched to their real name in college. I think it feels too cutesy to have people you meet as an adult call you a name that’s basically a diminutive of your dad. These became family nicknames only.
Anonymous wrote:The only thing I would really be wary of is if there’s a nickname you hate that’s associated with the name you like. So, if your son is Daniel but you hate Dan for example, I would steer clear of those names. You just never know.
I think if you pick a completely random nickname like Birdie it’s very likely that your kid starts using Elizabeth in school and Birdie becomes a name only mom and dad use. Even siblings tend to use the standard school name so people know who they’re talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Op again- how about something like Junior or Trey or Sonny? Anyone have luck with those?
Anonymous wrote:Op again- how about something like Junior or Trey or Sonny? Anyone have luck with those?