Anonymous wrote:LOL. My dad wanted to name my sister Agnes.
Anonymous wrote:I know someone named their sons Sean and Ian. I asked them if they knew they gave their sons the same name..John? She didn't care but I thought it strange.
Anonymous wrote:Any name that whose pronunciation has to be explained as a first name. Knew an Anna whose parents pronounced it the European way ( Ah-na). She was livid whenever someone mispronounced her name. She just got so sick of having the same conversation over and over. I would never do that to my kid.
Other examples:
Maria pronounced with a long I ( Mariah)
Clive pronounced the a long e ( Cleve)
Joanna with the syllable juncture in a different place.
( Joan-na)
Totally fine if that’s the standard pronunciation in your home country . Otherwise, it’s mean.
Anonymous wrote:Brayden, Jayden etc
Paxton, Knoxten, Jaxon etc
Haysleigh, Paisley, Braysley etc
My pediatrician has a Cayden and a Brinsley. Like her but def lost points in my book. Trashy.
Anonymous wrote:Any name that whose pronunciation has to be explained as a first name. Knew an Anna whose parents pronounced it the European way ( Ah-na). She was livid whenever someone mispronounced her name. She just got so sick of having the same conversation over and over. I would never do that to my kid.
Other examples:
Maria pronounced with a long I ( Mariah)
Clive pronounced the a long e ( Cleve)
Joanna with the syllable juncture in a different place.
( Joan-na)
Totally fine if that’s the standard pronunciation in your home country . Otherwise, it’s mean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd never give my children rhyming or versions of the one same name.
Examples from real life include; twins Joey and Zoey, and sisters born eight years apart, Melissa and Melinda.
Grew up with sisters Lisa and Elizabeth (lisa is Italian for Elizabeth).
And I'd never go the all same first letter name pattern for multiple children. I knew a family - let's call them the Harrisons; mom Hazel, dad Harvey and children were Helen, Heather and Heidi. Awful.
I was an adult expecting my own child when I realized my grandma named her first two kids Michelle and Michael.I asked her about it and she told me that Mike was the only name she’s ever liked, and my mom came first so she went with the nearest girl name.
TBF, she didn’t have the best sounding board. Her mother, my great-grandma, named my twin aunts Sharon and Karen. *shudder*
I have a friend who is the youngest of 6. A, B, C, D, E & F are the kids name. Started as accident and they continued the trend. Kinda cool, I think.
Clarifying. Their names begin with a-f.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd never give my children rhyming or versions of the one same name.
Examples from real life include; twins Joey and Zoey, and sisters born eight years apart, Melissa and Melinda.
Grew up with sisters Lisa and Elizabeth (lisa is Italian for Elizabeth).
And I'd never go the all same first letter name pattern for multiple children. I knew a family - let's call them the Harrisons; mom Hazel, dad Harvey and children were Helen, Heather and Heidi. Awful.
I was an adult expecting my own child when I realized my grandma named her first two kids Michelle and Michael.I asked her about it and she told me that Mike was the only name she’s ever liked, and my mom came first so she went with the nearest girl name.
TBF, she didn’t have the best sounding board. Her mother, my great-grandma, named my twin aunts Sharon and Karen. *shudder*