Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clover and Blythe
I had to look at the date and make sure I didn’t post this
Love these names!
I'm surprised that Clover isn't more popular, botanical names generally seem big.
Clover gives off a cow vibe, maybe?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clover and Blythe
I had to look at the date and make sure I didn’t post this
Love these names!
I'm surprised that Clover isn't more popular, botanical names generally seem big.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clover and Blythe
I had to look at the date and make sure I didn’t post this
Love these names!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is one really foul Bridget hater here.
I'm Irish, and I love your tribute to your grandma, PP.
+1 It's so strange that they don't understand "When I hear a classic Irish girl's name I just think you're poor! Because Irish people are poor and they had to be maids!" isn't convincing Irish Americans to be ashamed that their ancestors might have been poor. It just makes that PP sound like a bigoted jagoff. Congrats on your great-great-whatever having a maid, I guess? Since that's apparently a source of pride for some people?
Anonymous wrote:Clover and Blythe
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really like many 80s girl names: Amanda, Jessica, Heather, Kimberly, Amy, Nicole. Imagine meeting a baby named Amanda!
Right!?? Or Scott, or Eric. Seems insane now.
Totally. Baby Scott! Or Jeremy, or Greg.
or Todd!
Anonymous wrote:Also Lina, it’s not a name a hear often nowadays
Anonymous wrote:PP Bridget’s mom here and what have I started?
My great grandmother left Ireland at 16 and came to the U.S. in 1905. She left her parents and youngest sibling behind and although she never saw any of them ever again, she faithfully wired money back to them for the balance of her working life.
And, she was a domestic, a maid. Why? Because that was the ONLY job available for a single, Irish-Catholic teenager with a fifth grade education. She married an older Irish immigrant who was employed as a chauffeur, also one of the few jobs available for Irish men of the era with limited education.
Yes, I heard the stories that Bridget was so common particularly among domestics that it became a shorthand or nickname of sorts, “have you hired a Bridget?” and in early movies, the maid character was called Bridget. Guarantee that no teenager or even young adult knows (or cares) about any of this.
But Catholics follow naming traditions and choose at least one saint’s name at baptism and or at confirmation. St. Brigid of Ireland (Kildare) is a special way to memorialize my GGMo.
[/quote
....set to the sad tune of a solitary fiddle, or lonely tin whistle
Haven’t we exhausted the sad oppressed Irish trope by now? Have there been what, four generations since the maid you named your daughter after a maid?