Anonymous wrote:Two different Abigails!
Anonymous wrote:In Judaism custom is to name in honor of dead relatives so makes sense to name for grandparents or great grandparents- our kids will make lots of babies named Susan and Judy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elodie, one parent is francophone.
Elodie is a very dated name in France. The trend there is towards less florid, feminine names. I wondered if the parents of Clémence up thread were French, that's a popular name there now.
Elodie sounds like Collette to my ear -- a name a non French person would give a French character in a play.
This was my thought, too. Elodie is rare for someone under the age of 40 in France.
But that’s consistent with the broader trend of UMC Americans giving kids names that remind them of their grandparents.
Most recent baby in my world: Carl. It’s a good name and a good baby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rebekkah
Charlotte
Clemence
Elton
Is Clemence a boy or a girl?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elodie, one parent is francophone.
Elodie is a very dated name in France. The trend there is towards less florid, feminine names. I wondered if the parents of Clémence up thread were French, that's a popular name there now.
Elodie sounds like Collette to my ear -- a name a non French person would give a French character in a play.
This was my thought, too. Elodie is rare for someone under the age of 40 in France.
But that’s consistent with the broader trend of UMC Americans giving kids names that remind them of their grandparents.
Most recent baby in my world: Carl. It’s a good name and a good baby.
I hate the name Carl. It should be retired.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elodie, one parent is francophone.
Elodie is a very dated name in France. The trend there is towards less florid, feminine names. I wondered if the parents of Clémence up thread were French, that's a popular name there now.
Elodie sounds like Collette to my ear -- a name a non French person would give a French character in a play.
This was my thought, too. Elodie is rare for someone under the age of 40 in France.
But that’s consistent with the broader trend of UMC Americans giving kids names that remind them of their grandparents.
Most recent baby in my world: Carl. It’s a good name and a good baby.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:90% of these names are hideous. Clark???
Clark seems fine? Names are cyclical and Clark sounds like someone's grandpa's or great grandpa's name. That's just how baby names work.
I prefer it to a name like Hudson which sounds pretentious to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elodie, one parent is francophone.
Elodie is a very dated name in France. The trend there is towards less florid, feminine names. I wondered if the parents of Clémence up thread were French, that's a popular name there now.
Elodie sounds like Collette to my ear -- a name a non French person would give a French character in a play.
This was my thought, too. Elodie is rare for someone under the age of 40 in France.