Anonymous wrote:Don’t do it. It sounds totally Jersey Shore.
Anonymous wrote:Ok, I'll be the first to disagree.
I think they are pretty matchy, and I say my kids names together all the time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the need to add the -y? No need to cutify things. Sound ok for a little kid but not a nickname for older kids.
Presumably the kid will be little when he's born. That's a pretty common situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I knew a family with a Joey, Jimmy, and Johnny, and then they had a fourth boy. His name was something like Daniel. I always thought he must feel left out!
But I think it's fine. I assume they'll have formal names that sound a little more different (e.g. Joseph and John). Both are such great names!
Thank you! Yes, they will officially be Joseph and John. I just keep imagining the Duggars when I say "Joey and Johnny" in my head... but I'm hoping it's just pregnancy anxiety nonsense.
Joseph and John are nice names. Not even common these days. Joey and Johnny are cute!
Anonymous wrote:I like them much better than the pretentious Jacks, Finns, Aidens, Henrys, and Liams.
Anonymous wrote:OP back again- thanks for all of the responses! I do like John on its own way better than I like Joe on its own so maybe I will make a point to not revert to "Johnny" the first few months and force myself to just say "John" and it will stick. I have a tendency to use nicknames/diminuitives (I can't spell that word sorry) so I know that saying "Johnny" is going to come more naturally to me with a baby.
I appreciate the dissenter, too, it made me feel like I wasn't totally crazy for feeling this way- thanks!
But I also really appreciate how no one else seems to think it matters because maybe that will make me just chill out and drop the issue.
Even writing this response makes me realize I am legit crazy on pregnancy hormones to even care this much and write this much, so that's something too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the need to add the -y? No need to cutify things. Sound ok for a little kid but not a nickname for older kids.
Presumably the kid will be little when he's born. That's a pretty common situation.
But nicknames stick for a while. I still remember a teacher in high school telling a kid it was time to go by rob not robbie? if she did that these days she’d be crucified.
I’m pushing 60, and I still can’t rid of my cutesy childhood nickname that ends with an “i”.