Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
What are the American names?
+1
I have an older Noah early on when the name was exploding and when he was 1 I had an older lady admonish me for picking it because it's a Jewish name![]()
Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
Anonymous wrote:I personally only know Isas (ee-sahs, or Lisa without the L), from Spanish or Latin backgrounds or not, and I find Bella really grating.
I think it’s because every 20 something guy I knew before I was married had a lab named Bella. So when I hear a HS-aged girl named that, I think “chubby black lab who knows clever party tricks”. One of them could open the beer fridge!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
What culture do you think Isabella comes from? If you look, historically, it's used all over the world: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isabella_(given_name)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
What are the American names?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
What are the American names?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
What are the American names?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
Depends on the name. We live in a migratory world. Names travel. Every name you think of as "American" or belonging to the English-speaking world is likely derived from another place and language. Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, old French, German, or English.
Of the names you've mentioned, Isabella has made the leap to English speakers and will no longer make people assume you're Italian. Luca is borderline -- you'd be fine in cities but it will sound foreign in some parts of the US. Gianna looks and sounds Italian to Americans, if you use it, people will probably think it's weird you don't have Italian heritage.
Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?
Anonymous wrote:Is this a good time to mention that naming your kid Isabella/Gianna/Luca/any foreign name when you are not from that culture is cringey?