Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"We now call to the stage, two twins who will really get you hot!
Good grief. DCUM and its fixation with "stripper names".
So, it would have been funnier if I referred to them as paegent names? C'mon, you know this is a tragic pairing.
No, it would have been the same thing. "Stripper name", "trashy", "trailer park" -- I guess "pageant name" is a new variation, at least to me, but it's still the same fixation on socioeconomic class as an indicator of human worth.
And it's foolish. If there had been a DCUM 50-60 years ago, people would surely have told Celina Baez and Ann Dunham that nobody named Sonia or Barack would ever grow up to be a judge or a president.
Anonymous wrote:Twins tend to struggle to establish their own, separate identities and not be perceived as a set. Don't give them names that make that harder by being matchy-matchy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paisley Ann/ Payton Marie
Paisley Claire/ Payton Leigh
Paisley Marie/ Payton Ann
Paisley Elizabeth/ Payton Claire
These sound nice to me.
Would you consider Paige instead of Paisley? Paisley makes me cringe!
Anonymous wrote:Hmmmm. Maybe I am nuts-- and I usually hate cutesy names-- but I like these. paisely is a pretty word and I like Peyton for a girl (see One Tree Hill).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Come on OP, you know how pretentious and made up these names are.
Paisley is the name of a fabric, not of a child. And Payton is spelled Peyton. It is a name you'd find in the south when it's spelled correctly.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think OP asked your opinion on the first names, PP. She asked for suggestions on middle names.
Plus I don't know how a name can be both "pretentious" and "made up", given reactions by people like you to "made up" names. Whom do you think the OP is trying to impress with these names?
And "Paisley" is a real actual word.
And I wouldn't have recommended telling Walter Payton that he spelled his name wrong.
Anonymous wrote:At least make it Paisley and Plaid. Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Come on OP, you know how pretentious and made up these names are.
Paisley is the name of a fabric, not of a child. And Payton is spelled Peyton. It is a name you'd find in the south when it's spelled correctly.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think OP asked your opinion on the first names, PP. She asked for suggestions on middle names.
Plus I don't know how a name can be both "pretentious" and "made up", given reactions by people like you to "made up" names. Whom do you think the OP is trying to impress with these names?
And "Paisley" is a real actual word.
And I wouldn't have recommended telling Walter Payton that he spelled his name wrong.