Post Your Kids Names (NO SPAM)
- Ode to a Grasshopper
- Posts: 6664
- Joined: Mon Aug 06, 2001 10:00 pm
- Location: Australia
- Contact:
Ta @HLD. I'd sort of wondered about that.
Proud SLURRite Gunner of the Rolling Thunder (TM) - Visitors WELCOME!
([size=0]Feel free to join us for a drink, play some pool or even relax in a hottub - want to learn more?[/size]
The soul must be free, whatever the cost.
([size=0]Feel free to join us for a drink, play some pool or even relax in a hottub - want to learn more?[/size]
The soul must be free, whatever the cost.
I don't have any children, not yet at least. With the typically Swedish surname I share with my husband, the choice of suitable names is unfortunately limited, but if didn't have to think about the poor kids being traumatised forever, I'd name them:
Lavinia
Gwendolyn
Vyatechlav (I can't spell Russian names in English!)
Alexander
Oscar
The two last are the only ones that would work in Swedish.
Lavinia
Gwendolyn
Vyatechlav (I can't spell Russian names in English!)
Alexander
Oscar
The two last are the only ones that would work in Swedish.
"There are in fact two things, science and opinion; the former begets knowledge, the latter ignorance." - Hippocrates
Moderator of Planescape: Torment, Diablo I & II and Dungeon Siege forums
- Gwalchmai
- Posts: 6252
- Joined: Wed May 09, 2001 11:00 am
- Location: This Quintessence of Dust
- Contact:
Interesting. We chose the name Alexandra (wink @ WeaselOriginally posted by HighLordDave
I've always wondered about people who give their children one name, but call them something different. To me it doesn't make a lot of sense. For instance, a woman in my office just had a baby and named her Megan Abigail, but they're calling her Abby. Why not name her Abby?
My younger brother was always called by his middle name, until he went to college. Now all his friends call him by his first, but his family still calls him by his middle. I think he is rather fond of the distinction.
That there; exactly the kinda diversion we coulda used.
- HighLordDave
- Posts: 4062
- Joined: Sun Jan 14, 2001 11:00 pm
- Location: Between Middle-Earth and the Galaxy Far, Far Away
- Contact:
@Gwalchmai:
I think that your naming of your daughter Alexandra is the exception rather than the rule when folks name their kids. I think many people choose names not because they like them or because they want their kids have their own unique name, but rather because his father was named that or it's in honour of her great-aunt Matilda. That kind of thing makes me sick. Why can't your kid be his own person instead of starting life with his grandfather's name?
I think that many parents consciously name their kids one thing with the express intention of calling them something else. This is what baffles me. Why name your daughter Lauren only to call her Brooke? Or why name your kid Kevin Archibald McMichael IV and call him Scott? Why not name your kids Brooke and Scott and save everyone a lot of confusion?
I think versatility in names is often a good thing, especially since kids periodically want to reinvent themselves at different points in their lives. For instance, I went to college with a girl named Melissa who was very smart and pretty. However, when one of her old high school friends came to visit her one weekend, she called Melissa "Missy" and was telling us stories about how wild and airheaded she used to be. For Melissa, abandoning the name she had used all through school was part of leaving her past behind and becoming someone else.
I think that your naming of your daughter Alexandra is the exception rather than the rule when folks name their kids. I think many people choose names not because they like them or because they want their kids have their own unique name, but rather because his father was named that or it's in honour of her great-aunt Matilda. That kind of thing makes me sick. Why can't your kid be his own person instead of starting life with his grandfather's name?
I think that many parents consciously name their kids one thing with the express intention of calling them something else. This is what baffles me. Why name your daughter Lauren only to call her Brooke? Or why name your kid Kevin Archibald McMichael IV and call him Scott? Why not name your kids Brooke and Scott and save everyone a lot of confusion?
I think versatility in names is often a good thing, especially since kids periodically want to reinvent themselves at different points in their lives. For instance, I went to college with a girl named Melissa who was very smart and pretty. However, when one of her old high school friends came to visit her one weekend, she called Melissa "Missy" and was telling us stories about how wild and airheaded she used to be. For Melissa, abandoning the name she had used all through school was part of leaving her past behind and becoming someone else.
Jesus saves! And takes half damage!
If brute force doesn't work, you're not using enough.
If brute force doesn't work, you're not using enough.
- Yshania
- Posts: 8572
- Joined: Wed May 09, 2001 10:00 pm
- Location: Some Girls Wander By Mistake
- Contact:
LOL!Originally posted by HighLordDave
I've always wondered about people who give their children one name, but call them something different. To me it doesn't make a lot of sense. For instance, a woman in my office just had a baby and named her Megan Abigail, but they're calling her Abby. Why not name her Abby?.
My daughter is Rachael, I call her Rae
Parachute for sale, like new! Never opened!
Guinness, black goes with everything.
Guinness, black goes with everything.
- HighLordDave
- Posts: 4062
- Joined: Sun Jan 14, 2001 11:00 pm
- Location: Between Middle-Earth and the Galaxy Far, Far Away
- Contact:
I had a friend whose sister was named Andrea but she was obsessed with Little House on the Praire, so she insisted that everyone call her "Laura". I still called her Andrea; it drove her nuts.Originally posted by Yshania
My daughter is Rachael, I call her Raebut right now she insists we call her Dana. Kids!
![]()
![]()
Jesus saves! And takes half damage!
If brute force doesn't work, you're not using enough.
If brute force doesn't work, you're not using enough.
No kids for now, if I ever have a female I'd love to name
her DIANA (with the italian pronunciation, hmm, see,
as you should read "Deeana")
How I love this name!!
For a male, I don't know yet...
her DIANA (with the italian pronunciation, hmm, see,
as you should read "Deeana")
How I love this name!!
For a male, I don't know yet...
BG2 - ToB Refinements Mod: Website
BG2 - ToB Refinements Mod: Forum and announcements
"Ever forward, my darling wind..."
BG2 - ToB Refinements Mod: Forum and announcements
"Ever forward, my darling wind..."
It will do them goodOriginally posted by Gruntboy
Frogus, those kids are gonna catch hell at school.
@CE, these are both excellent names. I love Russian names, and have convinced one of my friends (he unfortunately dropped history last year) to name his kids Trotsky and Gorky. Fingers crossed!Lavinia
Vyatechlav

Love and Hope and Sex and Dreams are Still Surviving on the Street
LOLOriginally posted by frogus
to name his kids Trotsky and Gorky. Fingers crossed!![]()
“Caw, Caw!” The call of the wild calls you. Are you listening? Do you dare challenge their power? Do you dare invade? Nature will always triumph in the end.
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
erm, but won't the names then mean really odd things? when there were some Japanese exchange students at our school we were talking about what our names could mean if they were in Chinese characters. One of my friends had his translated as 'rich, intelligent doctor', while mine could essentially be interpreted as 'hot water bottle'.Originally posted by Minerva
That reminds me, there's a boom in Japan that parents give children English (or other European)names with Chinese characters...
Here where the flattering and mendacious swarm
Of lying epitaths their secrets keep,
At last incapable of further harm
The lewd forefathers of the village sleep.
Of lying epitaths their secrets keep,
At last incapable of further harm
The lewd forefathers of the village sleep.
ROFLOriginally posted by frogus
@CE, these are both excellent names. I love Russian names, and have convinced one of my friends (he unfortunately dropped history last year) to name his kids Trotsky and Gorky. Fingers crossed!![]()
I also love Russian names, especially male names...Vassiliev, Dmiitry, Maxim...
Lavinia is my favorite women's name, it is fairly common in Romania, but not anywhere else that I know of...and unfortunately it would sound really stupid together with our common surname (I have double surnames, one is more neutral, but the one I share with my husband is typically Swedish and difficult to match any foreign name to.)
"There are in fact two things, science and opinion; the former begets knowledge, the latter ignorance." - Hippocrates
Moderator of Planescape: Torment, Diablo I & II and Dungeon Siege forums
LOL, I am not well read enough into different communist/socialist theory to be able to differentiate Trotskism from other forms, I was more thinking about his grisly ending.Originally posted by Nippy
What's wrong with Trotsky, CE?
*Nippy is rapidly overwraught by Stalinist's and crushed into factory.*
"There are in fact two things, science and opinion; the former begets knowledge, the latter ignorance." - Hippocrates
Moderator of Planescape: Torment, Diablo I & II and Dungeon Siege forums
Big group of assassins with an icepick to the head, right? Yeah. I would consider that a grisly ending.Originally posted by C Elegans
LOL, I am not well read enough into different communist/socialist theory to be able to differentiate Trotskism from other forms, I was more thinking about his grisly ending.
“Caw, Caw!” The call of the wild calls you. Are you listening? Do you dare challenge their power? Do you dare invade? Nature will always triumph in the end.
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
Multiple times, Im sure. He just refused to die.Originally posted by Nippy
Indeed so, but what about the death of Rasputin? Now that must've hurt.![]()
![]()
“Caw, Caw!” The call of the wild calls you. Are you listening? Do you dare challenge their power? Do you dare invade? Nature will always triumph in the end.
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
ROFLOriginally posted by Nippy
LMAO, true,
"Right, shoot him!"
*Bang*
"Ow, you shot me! That really hurt!"
"Drown him!"
*Glub, glub, glub*
"Goddammit, get the icepick!"
![]()
You forgot about the stabbing! And wasnt there something else, too? I mean this guy was a tank!
“Caw, Caw!” The call of the wild calls you. Are you listening? Do you dare challenge their power? Do you dare invade? Nature will always triumph in the end.
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
[color=sky blue]I know that I die gracefully in vain. I know inside detiorates in pain.[/color]-Razed in Black
- HighLordDave
- Posts: 4062
- Joined: Sun Jan 14, 2001 11:00 pm
- Location: Between Middle-Earth and the Galaxy Far, Far Away
- Contact: