Anonymous wrote:How DO you pronounce Saiorse?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about all those old Irish names that are spelled non-phonetically? Do you have a problem with Saiorse or etc?
I think Xochitl is cool. Nearly no one gets an X name! Unique, exotic, pretty pronunciation.
Ximena is another name seen in Mexico.
Xiomara too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. Based on the terrible responses on this post I’m soooo glad I didn’t take name advice from DCUM. Xochitl is an awesome name. You all have poor taste.
I don’t think anyone is saying it’s not a pretty name. They’re saying people will not know how to pronounce it. I’m Mexican and I wouldn’t name my DD this name unless we lived in Mexico where people know how to pronounce it.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a pretty name. People will learn how to pronounce it. I say go for it.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. Based on the terrible responses on this post I’m soooo glad I didn’t take name advice from DCUM. Xochitl is an awesome name. You all have poor taste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hard pass. Not a marketable name. Would actually impede a person's progress in the real world. No one would want to look like an ass by not being able to pronounce the name so even the best credentials wouldn't get her call backs for jobs.
Really hoping you don't hire people! Having to ask someone how to pronounce their name is way less of an asshole move than discriminating against people with non-English names.
Actually I also wouldn't bother to call back Rhys or Siobhan either. Plenty of regular folks out there that in a customer service or business setting wouldn't cause issues with their names.
No one cares what you think.
I'm saying what most people think. I'm not impressed by a rare name from Mexico and it reflects poorly. I'm also not impressed by Aydans, Greysons, Austyns and whatever other weird names privileged people pick for their kids. It's a weird trend.
Anonymous wrote:It is beautiful. I would be concerned if your husband wasn't Mexican, but he and, presumably, his entire family will know how to pronounce it and won't consider it strange or unusual. Ignore the people on here saying it's ugly -- it is unfamiliar to them, and some people hate unfamiliar things. But how better to teach your daughter the joy of her heritage, and the joy of something unusual and unique, than to giver her a Mexican name that people here will find unusual and unique.
I love when people give their children names from their cultural heritage. I grew up in an era when everyone -- even the many Native, Hispanic, Korean-American, and Chinese-American families I grew up around -- named their kids Jessica and Gary and Kristy and Jeff. Now all my friends I grew up with are giving their kids names that honor or incorporate their family's heritage. We don't need a million Jessicas. We could use one more Xochitl.