Anonymous wrote:Sean
Oscar
Patrick
Michael
Phineas
Seamus
Diarmod
Ciaran
Lugh
Oisin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend with a William, nn Liam. It’s cute.
A first-gen Irish person will NOT think it's cute to use Liam as a nickname for William. Liam is the entire name. It's William in English.
Dp. Good grief. Who cares what a first generation Irish person thinks using Liam as a nn will do or be offended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a friend with a William, nn Liam. It’s cute.
A first-gen Irish person will NOT think it's cute to use Liam as a nickname for William. Liam is the entire name. It's William in English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before we found out sex for my dd, we settled on Finian (nn Finn) for a boy. Ended up having a Caroline. Six months later my cousin had twin boys—first boys in the generation after 11 girls in a row—and named them Finn and Ian. (He has no idea about our name choice so this was just a bizarre coincidence.) Unfortunately, we live 30 min from them and see them multiple times a year for family gatherings so this isn’t a “distant cousin we’ll never see” sort of thing.
Anyway, my husband and I are having a hard time moving on now that we are nearing the end of my second pregnancy, this time with a boy. DH is first generation Irish-American with a “hard” to pronounce Irish name that he usually just anglicizes for strangers but is drawn to names with an Irish origin—just pronounceable ones.
My current consideration list:
1. Nolan (Texas friends have tried to ruin this by saying it makes them think of beef.)
2. Benjamin, nn Ben (adore Ben but wish it wasn’t top 10.)
3. William, nn Will (same as above)
Husband’s list:
1. Liam (his middle name and like 7 of his cousins and so overdone IMO)
2. Connor (it’s fine but it sounds cutesy with Caroline and I have annoying family that would 100% call him Conman)
3. Gavin (I do like this but something about it feels trendy and not strong/classic to me)
4. Declan (Same as above)
What name are we missing? What would you go with?
Name. Him. Finnian. (Even though it's a dumb name and sounds weird) --> You said yourself, DH has 7 cousins with the same name, Liam, so what problem are 2 kids named Finn? Not a darn problem.
Also, STOP asking friends' opinions. They don't matter.
Conman? Huh?
Gavin = trashy and WV/redneck
Declan = try hard yuppy hipster gen x.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Casey. It is a great boy's name. Classic Irish. And not overused.
I loved my uncle Casey! He didn’t have kids and always gave us cousins the best presents. He always had root beer and he sang Irish songs really well.
OP I’d smile so much to see a little boy Casey
Anonymous wrote:Before we found out sex for my dd, we settled on Finian (nn Finn) for a boy. Ended up having a Caroline. Six months later my cousin had twin boys—first boys in the generation after 11 girls in a row—and named them Finn and Ian. (He has no idea about our name choice so this was just a bizarre coincidence.) Unfortunately, we live 30 min from them and see them multiple times a year for family gatherings so this isn’t a “distant cousin we’ll never see” sort of thing.
Anyway, my husband and I are having a hard time moving on now that we are nearing the end of my second pregnancy, this time with a boy. DH is first generation Irish-American with a “hard” to pronounce Irish name that he usually just anglicizes for strangers but is drawn to names with an Irish origin—just pronounceable ones.
My current consideration list:
1. Nolan (Texas friends have tried to ruin this by saying it makes them think of beef.)
2. Benjamin, nn Ben (adore Ben but wish it wasn’t top 10.)
3. William, nn Will (same as above)
Husband’s list:
1. Liam (his middle name and like 7 of his cousins and so overdone IMO)
2. Connor (it’s fine but it sounds cutesy with Caroline and I have annoying family that would 100% call him Conman)
3. Gavin (I do like this but something about it feels trendy and not strong/classic to me)
4. Declan (Same as above)
What name are we missing? What would you go with?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you feel about Nigel?
That's an English name
My boyfriend is from Ireland and named Nigel
Anonymous wrote:Casey. It is a great boy's name. Classic Irish. And not overused.