Anonymous wrote:My name is Crystal and I am low class pretending to be high class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My name is Christina but people who don't know me well call me Christine. I hate that. "Christine" sounds like trailer trash. The "a" make ALL the difference.![]()
And what about Khrystyna? OMG.
Christina sounds Italian or Latina to me. A little too frou frou for my personal tastes. Like your sister might be named Maria and you might live in The West Side Story.
Christine sounds Anglo/Irish or American to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My name is Christina but people who don't know me well call me Christine. I hate that. "Christine" sounds like trailer trash. The "a" make ALL the difference.![]()
And what about Khrystyna? OMG.
Christina sounds Italian or Latina to me. A little too frou frou for my personal tastes. Like your sister might be named Maria and you might live in The West Side Story.
Christine sounds Anglo/Irish or American to me.
Christina here. Sorry to dash your preconceptions about my name. Totally Anglo/Germanic. Upper middle class. My sister's name is Gretchen of all things.
But Christina is pretty much a universal (well, at least Western) name, for obvious reasons. It means "Anointed by Christ."
Sorry, I do know those things. But I still associate it with what I wrote above, because that is where I personally hear it the most. So, that is just one person's associations with your name. Don't worry, probably not most people's. But it is my own.
No worries. I'm sure I'd have opinions on your name if you chose to reveal it, esp. if it had a "y" in it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My name is Christina but people who don't know me well call me Christine. I hate that. "Christine" sounds like trailer trash. The "a" make ALL the difference.![]()
And what about Khrystyna? OMG.
Christina sounds Italian or Latina to me. A little too frou frou for my personal tastes. Like your sister might be named Maria and you might live in The West Side Story.
Christine sounds Anglo/Irish or American to me.
Christina here. Sorry to dash your preconceptions about my name. Totally Anglo/Germanic. Upper middle class. My sister's name is Gretchen of all things.
But Christina is pretty much a universal (well, at least Western) name, for obvious reasons. It means "Anointed by Christ."
Sorry, I do know those things. But I still associate it with what I wrote above, because that is where I personally hear it the most. So, that is just one person's associations with your name. Don't worry, probably not most people's. But it is my own.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My name is Christina but people who don't know me well call me Christine. I hate that. "Christine" sounds like trailer trash. The "a" make ALL the difference.![]()
And what about Khrystyna? OMG.
Christina sounds Italian or Latina to me. A little too frou frou for my personal tastes. Like your sister might be named Maria and you might live in The West Side Story.
Christine sounds Anglo/Irish or American to me.
Christina here. Sorry to dash your preconceptions about my name. Totally Anglo/Germanic. Upper middle class. My sister's name is Gretchen of all things.
But Christina is pretty much a universal (well, at least Western) name, for obvious reasons. It means "Anointed by Christ."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My name is Christina but people who don't know me well call me Christine. I hate that. "Christine" sounds like trailer trash. The "a" make ALL the difference.![]()
And what about Khrystyna? OMG.
Christina sounds Italian or Latina to me. A little too frou frou for my personal tastes. Like your sister might be named Maria and you might live in The West Side Story.
Christine sounds Anglo/Irish or American to me.
Anonymous wrote:My name is Christina but people who don't know me well call me Christine. I hate that. "Christine" sounds like trailer trash. The "a" make ALL the difference.![]()
And what about Khrystyna? OMG.