doodle
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2008
- Messages
- 1,810
I know there are oodles of baby name threads on here, but my curiosity is more about what specifically draws you to a name. Obviously, how it sounds with the last name tends to rank pretty high, but what else factors in for you? For example, if you and your SO and everyone in both your families were blonde-haired so your child would likely be as well, would a name with the meaning "dark-haired" be a no-go for you even if you loved the name? How important are names passed through your family? Do you tend to be drawn to names that are hyper-masculine or hyper-feminine? Do you dislike some names because they''re too trendy, too old-fashioned, sound too young or too old? Do some names conjure up certain connotations that you particularly do/do not care for? Has your taste in names changed considerably over the years?
For me, one example that comes to mind is my distaste for female names ending with "-ene" I live in the southeast US, and names ending with this syllable tend to be a common stereotype--kind of like the feminine equivalent of Billy Bob and Sammy Ray and all the other double names that people tend to use when mocking southerners, I suppose. I blame the country song with the line, "He wrote Billy Bob loves Charlene" for that association! Even with two of my best friends having _arlene names, I still just don''t like them!
I love names with softer vowel sounds (Aidan, Laila, etc). This directly stems from living in the south and having my first name "Maggi" because most people sound like they''re at the doctor getting checked with a tongue depressor when they say my name, and it makes me insane, so I tend to not like names with nasal vowel sounds as much. I also love female names that end with "a" and male names that start with "d" and "j" although I don''t really know why--maybe it''s just a coincidence that there happen to be a lot of names I like that fall into this category, or maybe it has to do with those being the only few letters that are legible with my terrible handwriting!
For me, one example that comes to mind is my distaste for female names ending with "-ene" I live in the southeast US, and names ending with this syllable tend to be a common stereotype--kind of like the feminine equivalent of Billy Bob and Sammy Ray and all the other double names that people tend to use when mocking southerners, I suppose. I blame the country song with the line, "He wrote Billy Bob loves Charlene" for that association! Even with two of my best friends having _arlene names, I still just don''t like them!
I love names with softer vowel sounds (Aidan, Laila, etc). This directly stems from living in the south and having my first name "Maggi" because most people sound like they''re at the doctor getting checked with a tongue depressor when they say my name, and it makes me insane, so I tend to not like names with nasal vowel sounds as much. I also love female names that end with "a" and male names that start with "d" and "j" although I don''t really know why--maybe it''s just a coincidence that there happen to be a lot of names I like that fall into this category, or maybe it has to do with those being the only few letters that are legible with my terrible handwriting!
