Children's names

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Bodhbh

Guru
Funny thing attitude to names. I was dealing with a Hungarian supplier with technical director called Attila. It felt very odd exchanging emails with Attila the Hun. Presumably it's seen as the name of a great leader liberating his people from their conquerors rather than as a barbarian at the gates.

On a similar note I did know an Icelander called Thor, seems quite common over there.

In comparison our names are quite dull, I think you have to go back to the anglosaxons till they liven up again. Think I'll pass tho on calling my kid Athelstan, Woden, or Cynwulf. A dog might get it soon tho :laugh:
 

Tail End Charlie

Well, write it down boy ......
On a similar note I did know an Icelander called Thor, seems quite common over there.

In comparison our names are quite dull, I think you have to go back to the anglosaxons till they liven up again. Think I'll pass tho on calling my kid Athelstan, Woden, or Cynwulf. A dog might get it soon tho :laugh:
On a similar note I was passing a church recently and thought Oswald a great name. There are several other saints whose names you never hear anyone called nowadays.
 

winjim

Straddle the line, discord and rhyme
On a similar note I did know an Icelander called Thor, seems quite common over there.

In comparison our names are quite dull, I think you have to go back to the anglosaxons till they liven up again. Think I'll pass tho on calling my kid Athelstan, Woden, or Cynwulf. A dog might get it soon tho :laugh:
Some of us do share our names with Anglo-Saxon kings ;)
 

Moon bunny

Judging your grammar
On a similar note I did know an Icelander called Thor, seems quite common over there.

In comparison our names are quite dull, I think you have to go back to the anglosaxons till they liven up again. Think I'll pass tho on calling my kid Athelstan, Woden, or Cynwulf. A dog might get it soon tho :laugh:
A local company is owned by a Thor (English surname) I am acquainted with an Ulf and a
Winnifred which both seem very unusual to me.
 

MarkF

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
My daughter is called Tierra, I like it but everybody calls her Tia and I don't like that at all. She has friend called Edwina which is bit of handicap for a 14 year old.
 

summerdays

Cycling in the sun
Location
Bristol
I'm just back from a presentation evening at school, and there is a wide range of names, everything from Emma, Thomas and Henry to the more unusual names: Ondine, Amber, Eoghan, Ceri, Tabitha, Leighton, Etienne, Yaqub, Shereena, Tomasz, Reide, Cole, Kianna, and Kaylem. I think when you meet someone with an unusual name it stands out but you soon get used to it, I grew up with a friend Sumani and her name didn't seem odd at all. Yes you sometimes make a judgement, just as you do by their looks or style of dressing, but often you find that first impression wasn't correct, a name is just the starting point.
 

perplexed

Guru
Location
Sheffield
I once came across someone who'd named their daughter Melena...





(For info, it means blood in poo...)
 

srw

It's a bit more complicated than that...
Ondine, Amber, Eoghan, Ceri, [...] Etienne, Yaqub, Shereena, Tomasz,
These are all common names in languages other than English (Etienne, for instance, is simply French for Stephen), and probably just reflect a large number of linguistic backgrounds among parents.
 

Mad Doug Biker

Banned from every bar in the Galaxy
Location
Craggy Island
Twins at a local school, Dulux & Double Gloss.
Heard as the teachers were checking the kids were boarding the correct buses.

Were the parents so overcome with emulsion when the kids were born or something??

I'm waiting for the first girl named Ebola.

I was at school with a girl who's big sister was called Louise.

Nothing wrong with that and it is actualiy quite a nice name really I hear you say...... Well, yes, except that she was regularly nicknamed

'Louise The Disease'.

I'm waiting for the first girl named Clamidia... it does sound nice, like one of those classy greek names.

I knew a guy who named his cat Clamydia as he thought it was a great name for a pussy......

Sorry, names as called out for the buses. Checked I'd heard correctly with one of the teachers I knew. I'd mis-heard the first one.

Don't tell us it was worse??!!

On a similar note I was passing a church recently and thought Oswald a great name. There are several other saints whose names you never hear anyone called nowadays.

I was thinking, Cuthbert isn't a name you hear much of these days.
 

summerdays

Cycling in the sun
Location
Bristol
I know that the names are from a mixture of different origins, and not really unusual, it just stuck me at the evening the range of names, in comparison to when I was at school and most children had duplicate names in the school or even in their class. Children grow up with more and more different names around them. Maybe in twenty years the maternity wards are going to be full of Blue-moon, Sugar and Tink-Grass (sorry trying to think of names that aren't names starts getting me thinking of stupid words).
 
One of mine is a Xander. Yes, he really was named after Xander from Buffy the vampire slayer... I guess he should be glad though, as we already had a cat called Willow so if he'd been a girl maybe he'd have been a Buffy. The midwife commented that she'd never delivered a Xander before.

Bizarrely, there is actually another Xander in his year at school. For a year they were even in the same class.
 

winjim

Straddle the line, discord and rhyme
[QUOTE 3799454, member: 10119"]One of mine is a Xander. Yes, he really was named after Xander from Buffy the vampire slayer... I guess he should be glad though, as we already had a cat called Willow so if he'd been a girl maybe he'd have been a Buffy. The midwife commented that she'd never delivered a Xander before.

Bizarrely, there is actually another Xander in his year at school. For a year they were even in the same class.[/QUOTE]
Now that's just ignorant. Even Xander out of Buffy wasn't actually named Xander. I wonder how many Alexes that midwife had delivered.
 

Cubist

Still wavin'
Location
Ovver 'thill
When my kids were born we were asked by the midwife what we were going to call them, which led to a bit of a discussion around "traditional" names. She let slip that she had just delivered her first Teletubby, a Laa-Laa. Apparently the name was chosen as it was her big sister's favourite. This was in 1997, so the programme had been running about 6 months.
 
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