Anonymous wrote:I think it's super weird that a white couple from America named their daughter India.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m Muslim and yeah I find it weird when non Muslims use Muslim/Arab names and esp w zero idea of the significance of the name.
I agree. The meaning of names is very important, and it's strange to me when someone just picks an Arabic name and doesn't know what it means. I feel like Zain is like that. People think it sounds cool, but don't know or care about the meaning.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's super weird that a white couple from America named their daughter India.
Anonymous wrote:I have a very uncommon Hebrew name (>5 babies are named it every year) found in the Tanakh that is similar to a different Hebrew word-turned-name becoming very popular with the young white Christian set in the past five years or so. I’ve never met someone with my name. No one has ever assumed I was Jewish because of my name, I don’t think—white people actually tend to assume I’m black, I’ve been told because they think “name they’ve never heard before = black” which is...interesting. I was raised Christian.
Anonymous wrote:I’m Muslim and yeah I find it weird when non Muslims use Muslim/Arab names and esp w zero idea of the significance of the name.
Anonymous wrote:The amount of Jewish Ryans are a bit disconcerting.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's super weird that a white couple from America named their daughter India.
Anonymous wrote:Gave my daughter a Turkish name but this is part of the black American tradition of giving unusual and exotic names. There was a girl at my elem school named Covolous (pronounced Kuh-VI-yus) who I just figured out a few years ago was named after a flower.