Anonymous wrote:
You were a hall monitor in 5th grade, weren’t you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Ada/Adah
My daughter has had an Addie in her class every year. Addison, Adelynn and variations are quite popular.
Ada/Adah is a standalone name, very popular in the end of the 19th century.
Yes, that’s true, but it won’t feel that way when you’re one of 5 moms calling out for Ada/Addie at the playground...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is there such an obsession with finding “unused names”? Who cares?
I do. I have the most common name of my generation and it’s awful.
+2. I care too. Another here with a very popular name of my generation. I have never been in a class, a party, a family, or a work environment where there aren’t at least two other women with my first name. When I go into a hospice at the end of my days, I guarantee there will be at least one other woman with my name dying next to me.
Yes. Certain names tell your age. Like Jennifer is 40-something
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Ada/Adah
My daughter has had an Addie in her class every year. Addison, Adelynn and variations are quite popular.
Ada/Adah is a standalone name, very popular in the end of the 19th century.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is there such an obsession with finding “unused names”? Who cares?
I do. I have the most common name of my generation and it’s awful.
+2. I care too. Another here with a very popular name of my generation. I have never been in a class, a party, a family, or a work environment where there aren’t at least two other women with my first name. When I go into a hospice at the end of my days, I guarantee there will be at least one other woman with my name dying next to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cassandra
Serena
Samantha
Veronica
Vanessa
Sasha
Bianca
Sabrina
Carissa
Katrina
Cecilia
Claudia
Tabitha
OP specified two-syllables.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is there such an obsession with finding “unused names”? Who cares?
I do. I have the most common name of my generation and it’s awful.
+2. I care too. Another here with a very popular name of my generation. I have never been in a class, a party, a family, or a work environment where there aren’t at least two other women with my first name. When I go into a hospice at the end of my days, I guarantee there will be at least one other woman with my name dying next to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is there such an obsession with finding “unused names”? Who cares?
I do. I have the most common name of my generation and it’s awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher. Last year I had a student called Mary, and the name really few on me.
This is the only Mary I encountered among students in 14 years, so really is underused now.
DD is a 14 year old Mary and the only Mary in her entire school.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a teacher. Last year I had a student called Mary, and the name really few on me.
This is the only Mary I encountered among students in 14 years, so really is underused now.