Anonymous wrote:Veronica. Cuz it's so very.
Anonymous wrote:Huh, I knew a Mabel who was Hispanic - and pronounced with an accent it was SO pretty!
And the only Gideon I know was born to extremely religious parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hands down its Zoey/Zooey
Disagree. Too popular to be hipster any more, irrespective of the spelling.
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Doesn't make any sense. By definition, Hipsters are trendy and interested in conformity and popular things.
Besides, I don't think "Zoe" has changed in terms of SSA rankings very much in the last decade. It's been pretty well ensconced in the 30-60 range (i.e., you occasionally run into one, but not terribly common). http://www.parents.com/babynames/censusPopularity.jsp?babyNameId=307571&mode=USPopularity. I mean even now, you only find one Zoe for ever 1.6 million babies or something like that. http://www.babynamewizard.com/baby-name/girl/zoe
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hands down its Zoey/Zooey
Disagree. Too popular to be hipster any more, irrespective of the spelling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Giving your kids a name that is clearly from a different culture. I'm looking at you, white people (it's usually white people) who give their kids Indian names
Does this also count for Asians who name their kids things like Eunice and Leon?
Anonymous wrote:Giving your kids a name that is clearly from a different culture. I'm looking at you, white people (it's usually white people) who give their kids Indian names.
Also, Zooey (or any spelling variation thereof)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Carys posts make me think of the now-ubiquitous Caitlin and all its variations.
It's pronounced Kathleen in Ireland, but now all of a sudden there are tons of "Kate-lynns."
It's pronounced Kate-lynn here, though.
Only because someone saw the Irish name and mispronounced it. Kind of like if we saw Sean and pronounced it SEEN.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Atticus
August
Hazel
Matilda
We moved here from Brooklyn, and I know at least one kid under five with each of there names.
The only one of these names that screams Hipster is Atticus, mainly because it has never been a popular name and the only reference anybody has to it is from Atticus Finch. August, Hazel and Matilda, on the other hand, could be family names (probably aren't, but more likely than Atticus) and just seem more widely used throughout history.
Full disclosure: one of these names was the top contender for my child's first name, but dh could never quite commit. So it's DC's middle name![]()
Those names made PPs list because "hipsters" are the folks bringing old names back into fashion.
I disagree. Were the moms of Sophie and Isabella hipsters a few years back when those names were crazy popular? I think there's a general trend among all parents bringing back older names. But I do agree that "hipsters" are bringing back a certain type of older and quirky name. Maude, Otis, Felix. These names are old and kind of ugly (yet obviously endearing to some), as opposed to old and solid (Henry) or old and pretty/flowy/girly (Lillian, Isabella).