Anonymous wrote:Sherry
Max
Sophia (but for the record, I love Sophia Petrillo)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't hate them really but I definitely ruled out occupational names when we were considering options. So, no:
Harper
Archer
Piper
Hunter
etc
Tyler --does the bathroom
Skyler -- holds up the sky?
Taylor makes clothing.
Anyone named Cobbler?
Didn't Christie Brinkley name her kid Saylor? Maybe I'm just thinking of the MicroStrategy dude.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't hate them really but I definitely ruled out occupational names when we were considering options. So, no:
Harper
Archer
Piper
Hunter
etc
Tyler --does the bathroom
Skyler -- holds up the sky?
Taylor makes clothing.
Anyone named Cobbler?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zoe. It sounds like some sort of disease- "my child was infected with Zoe..."
This is my problem with Addison. Except that it's actually a disease.
Horrible.
The name Zoe is Greek. It means "life." I'm sorry the pp thinks it sounds like a disease, but that shows how little the pp actually knows. We selected the name Zoe for our daughter because her birth actually was a triumph of life out of disease. It's a beautiful name and it suits here. And shame on you for being so disgusting in your dismissal of it.
Addison literally means "son of Adam," so it's completely inappropriate for a girl. No, we don't have an Addison. But comparing a name to a disease? Reprehensible. The two people who wrote these two posts should spend some time reflecting on why they think this way and what it says about them as people and what happened in their lives to turn them into such wicked shrews. Who compares a name to a disease? Wow.
Somebody need to lighten up. Somebody already crapped on my daughters name and my middle and last name. I find this amusing; why do you care that much about what some anonymous person on a message board thinks?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate when people actually give their child a nickname as a full name. It is just wrong. Nicknames are cute and endearing but people deserve proper names folks. Jack is a nickname. John is a proper name. Charlie is a nickname. Charles is a proper name. Give your child a chance at a good job and some dignity. Don't set your child up by giving him or her a cutesy name in place of a proper name. Don't make up names. Don't spell names in an odd way. It's not cute. It's not fun. It's not special. What it is, is a crappy thing to do to a person. You may as well attach an addendum to your child's birth certificate that says, "I come from a low class and uneducated background," OR, "my mom was a striper with a 6th grade education."
John is a New Testament name. If you name your son John, just call him John. For Jews, Jack is a first proper first name. In fact, it is for non-Jews too. It's hit the "proper" name status. Deal with it. Signed, a mom who did not name her son John or Jack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't hate them really but I definitely ruled out occupational names when we were considering options. So, no:
Harper
Archer
Piper
Hunter
etc
Tyler --does the bathroom
Skyler -- holds up the sky?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zoe. It sounds like some sort of disease- "my child was infected with Zoe..."
This is my problem with Addison. Except that it's actually a disease.
Horrible.
The name Zoe is Greek. It means "life." I'm sorry the pp thinks it sounds like a disease, but that shows how little the pp actually knows. We selected the name Zoe for our daughter because her birth actually was a triumph of life out of disease. It's a beautiful name and it suits here. And shame on you for being so disgusting in your dismissal of it.
Addison literally means "son of Adam," so it's completely inappropriate for a girl. No, we don't have an Addison. But comparing a name to a disease? Reprehensible. The two people who wrote these two posts should spend some time reflecting on why they think this way and what it says about them as people and what happened in their lives to turn them into such wicked shrews. Who compares a name to a disease? Wow.
Somebody need to lighten up. Somebody already crapped on my daughters name and my middle and last name. I find this amusing; why do you care that much about what some anonymous person on a message board thinks?
Anonymous wrote:I don't hate them really but I definitely ruled out occupational names when we were considering options. So, no:
Harper
Archer
Piper
Hunter
etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Zoe. It sounds like some sort of disease- "my child was infected with Zoe..."
This is my problem with Addison. Except that it's actually a disease.
Horrible.
The name Zoe is Greek. It means "life." I'm sorry the pp thinks it sounds like a disease, but that shows how little the pp actually knows. We selected the name Zoe for our daughter because her birth actually was a triumph of life out of disease. It's a beautiful name and it suits here. And shame on you for being so disgusting in your dismissal of it.
Addison literally means "son of Adam," so it's completely inappropriate for a girl. No, we don't have an Addison. But comparing a name to a disease? Reprehensible. The two people who wrote these two posts should spend some time reflecting on why they think this way and what it says about them as people and what happened in their lives to turn them into such wicked shrews. Who compares a name to a disease? Wow.