If your last name is Smith, name your kid Loki Lie Smith.
Also Wonder Hippie holy shit that right there is a name. That's what annoys me about my name, it's all Anglo crashing into Polack. I kinda wish I was like my great uncle Mutz. Mutz is a good stocky name.
Also, anyone else have odd naming coincidences in their families? All but one of my male uncles on my fathers side are named "Ed". So is my dad's dad. There's my dad, Ed, my uncle Ed, and my uncle Steven, who changed his name to Ed. I think my grandpa's brother is named Ed too. Only he's Edmund instead of Edward. My uncle Bob feels left out.
My birth name is Joseph but I have been going by Joe for the last 8 years or so. Only the 3 or 4 people I still keep up with from elementary school call me Joseph, so I get confused when someone says my full name. My parental units had it easy with my naming because my dad's grandpa was named Joseph and my mom's dad's name was Joe.
According to the Wedding Vendors website, Joseph was the 11th most popular name in 1982. Despite its popularity, I have met less than 5 people in my life who share my name.
I managed to avoid the family tradition on my dad's side of being The One in my generation that is named Robert. My cousin dutifully carries that burden.
My wife and I have talked about baby names, just to see what will potentially be on the table when we get to that point. My only real suggestion is naming a daughter Mikaela (or Makayla).
I think naming people so-and-so the nth is weird. My dad's a III. There was apparently some significant amount of family tension when I came along and was not named IV.
There was a guy who was a couple years above me in high school who was a IV. His younger brother was V.
That said, W_H has a spectacular name, and should definitely share the wealth if the opportunity presents.
I'm seriously considering changing my name, both first and last (and middle I suppose). Last name I have no idea, but first name I've been kicking about numerous ideas, from the plain "Andrea" to the classic "Daliah" to the esoteric and nerdy "Shauni." Middle name is totally gonna be Ayla, for purely nerdy reasons. (But I am Jewish so it works.) It's mind-boggling, really. Never thought it would be this emotionally straining and take this long to decide.
My mother has four long names (Madeleine Elisabeth Wilhelmine Johanna), so when she had kids she gave them one short name. All my brothers and sisters have a single name of 4 or 6 letters long.
On the subject of classical names: if you name your girl Pandora, you know that some jokes will be made.
Having a weird name can be really frustrating sometimes, but always in small ways.
People never get my name right over the phone, for one, and more than a few bills through the years have had mispellings in my name. I'm always too lazy to actually correct them. It's just a nuisance, not an actual issue.
It shows up in weird ways people might not necessarily think of -- always having to repeat myself when I meet someone new, always getting asked what it means (when's the last time you asked a John that?), always getting asked if it's short for something (which is weird, but understandable, but again, who's the last Mike you asked if his name was short for anything?).
The other night I was just going for a walk near my house, and some cop rolled up on me to give me the perp check or whatever, asking me a bunch of questions. When he asked me my name, he lit up like he'd caught me in a lie and maybe he'd get to use his nightstick yet, "T?", eyes all excited and posture shooting up. I said really rudely and really quickly, "No, it's Tieg with a 'g' at the end. T-I-E-G. I know, it's unusual." He asked my last name, too, to see if I was so quick on that lie. I'm sure he didn't understand what I said then, either, but I was quick and confident enough that he just rolled off and left me alone after that. Shit like that gets old.
Oh and the girlfriend's parents who mispell your name on the Christmas card even after you've been dating her daughter for like three years. It seems inconsequential, but I mean considering how central a part of your identity a name is, you can't help but feel a little insulted.
Oh and the girlfriend's parents who mispell your name on the Christmas card even after you've been dating her daughter for like three years. It seems inconsequential, but I mean considering how central a part of your identity a name is, you can't help but feel a little insulted.
Man, my grandma used to put Tavin on all my christmas cards and shit. I know how you feel, man.
Oh and the girlfriend's parents who mispell your name on the Christmas card even after you've been dating her daughter for like three years. It seems inconsequential, but I mean considering how central a part of your identity a name is, you can't help but feel a little insulted.
I spelled a guy's name wrong the other day when I sent him an email about a job
This was because his name was listed incorrectly on the job posting site.
I emailed him again immediately after I figured it out to apologize, cause getting your name spelled wrong is hella annoying
There's kind of a naming convention in my family, every first born son is given the same middle name. I feel rather obligated.
My grandfather's name was Julian. I've always liked it. His nickname/cattle brand was Lazy J (The brand was a J rotated 90 degrees clockwise). How awesome is that nickname? Awesome.
For my kids : I always liked Raphael, or Raphaelle if it's a girl
Well I am cool but rude... I'll have to add it to my list.
Also, why do people insist on "having trouble" with names like "Hiro" and "Rajiv" ? They're phonetic! I think most of them do it on purpose to either be racist jerks or to get a rise out of people like me...
I'm David. My dad is David, but used to go by his middle name, Ewen. My grandad was David.
My mum is Susan, to continue the Dave-Sue theme. They're divorced now, but still.
I like my name. I'll also settle for Dave, which I don't mind too much. Davy or Davie I cannot stand, because through primary school it was what the mean kids called me.
For a son I think I'd continue the David thing, even just as a middle name. I always really liked the name Adrian as well. For a girl, maybe something like Nina.
I think naming people so-and-so the nth is weird. My dad's a III. There was apparently some significant amount of family tension when I came along and was not named IV.
There was a guy who was a couple years above me in high school who was a IV. His younger brother was V.
That said, W_H has a spectacular name, and should definitely share the wealth if the opportunity presents.
That's fucking retarded, because the younger brother would still technically be 4th in the line, he'd just be IV'.
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ShadowfireVermont, in the middle of nowhereRegistered Userregular
(I posted this in the failures of humanity thread a while back I think) When working at Wal-Mart I would often hear parents calling for their children. On this one particular occasion I happened to hear the one parent call her child by her name 'Euthanasia (pretty sure thats not how the mother spelled it)' I was so stunned I asked the mother if that was her real name. With a puzzled look she said "Yea, why?" I had no response...
I worked with this person who said she had a friend whose name is pronounced Shatheed. Well S's parents not knowing the best of English put the following spelling on his birth certificate:
'Shithead'
I can't imagine how much this kid was taunted; probably as much as a person with the last name 'Weiner'.
My last name was formerly "Suttonisky", but my great-grandfather changed it when he came to America so he'd do better in business and not be harassed for being Jewish.
I have a pretty common name... Kenneth. Although I was supposed to be named Joshua, which I think is a much better name... my nephew lucked out and got that one. My other nephew is named Caleb, which I quite like and give kudos to my sister for picking it out.
Coolest names I've seen... Lazarus, though the guy who had it was in no way cool. Also, Konstantine, who was some random German guy I traveled with in Cambodia.
I used to teach a Japanese 5-year-old girl called Yuu.
I'm pretty sure the only thing she liked about studying English was going "I'm You!" and giggling for a while.
Anyway, I'm gonna have a baby soon, which will have a Japanese surname and a western first name (though one which has to work in katakana). I really don't like how every Japanese/English baby is called Naomi or Hannah or George because the names exist in both languages. It's so dull.
If it's a boy, probably Sam. Named after LOTR Sam. People make a funny face when I tell them that, which is fun. Also with his surname, kinda feels like Sam Spade. I can imagine him going 'Sam ----, PI'
And that is a good thing.
If it's a girl, not sure.
I've tried old Irish and English names, but none of the ones I like work in katakana.
I've been thinking about goddess names (Artemis, Athena), but the same problem.
Recently I've been leaning towards hippyish names.
Do I have the nerve to name our kid Rainbow? Or Rain?
Bear in mind the kid will be growing up in Japan, where people won't know hippies do that. It'll just be a name.
I'm more scared of what the English speakers in my life will say if I call my daughter Snow or something.
Forgot to mention, my first name is Brian. I spent my entire elementary school career being called Brain and Brian the brain. I hated it even if it wasn't bad. Even my friends' parents called me that (except for one, who after calling me it once had the good sense to ask if I liked being called that).
My brother's name is Brent, which seems pretty rare, but I don't know if it is. I only knew one other one in school and the only other one I can think of is Brent Spiner, Data on Star Trek. FYI, don't name siblings with similar names unless you like having everyone confuse their names. Also, according to the dictionary, Brent is the smallest species of wild geese. It was hilarious to tell my brother that when I was 8.
Growing up in elementary school with six other Jordan's in your grade, all of them being girls, was not fun to say the least.
It especially sucks that my parents were going to call me Seth, which is a badass name. They decided against it at the last minute because it clashes with my last name.
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Also Wonder Hippie holy shit that right there is a name. That's what annoys me about my name, it's all Anglo crashing into Polack. I kinda wish I was like my great uncle Mutz. Mutz is a good stocky name.
Also, anyone else have odd naming coincidences in their families? All but one of my male uncles on my fathers side are named "Ed". So is my dad's dad. There's my dad, Ed, my uncle Ed, and my uncle Steven, who changed his name to Ed. I think my grandpa's brother is named Ed too. Only he's Edmund instead of Edward. My uncle Bob feels left out.
I like my name, actually. I've grown attached to it.
Pronounced "Smith".
Way to fuck that up, roommate.
I will forever associate you with the downfall of Napster now.
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If he is, next family reunion I will punch him in the face for you.
According to the Wedding Vendors website, Joseph was the 11th most popular name in 1982. Despite its popularity, I have met less than 5 people in my life who share my name.
I managed to avoid the family tradition on my dad's side of being The One in my generation that is named Robert. My cousin dutifully carries that burden.
My wife and I have talked about baby names, just to see what will potentially be on the table when we get to that point. My only real suggestion is naming a daughter Mikaela (or Makayla).
Peabody, Wescott, Maximillion, Wordsworth, Prescott, Bartholomew...
There was a guy who was a couple years above me in high school who was a IV. His younger brother was V.
That said, W_H has a spectacular name, and should definitely share the wealth if the opportunity presents.
Girls named "Michael" irk me
On the subject of classical names: if you name your girl Pandora, you know that some jokes will be made.
I knew a guy in college named X Maximillion [last name]. Yes, his first name was X. He has a brother... named Y.
People never get my name right over the phone, for one, and more than a few bills through the years have had mispellings in my name. I'm always too lazy to actually correct them. It's just a nuisance, not an actual issue.
It shows up in weird ways people might not necessarily think of -- always having to repeat myself when I meet someone new, always getting asked what it means (when's the last time you asked a John that?), always getting asked if it's short for something (which is weird, but understandable, but again, who's the last Mike you asked if his name was short for anything?).
The other night I was just going for a walk near my house, and some cop rolled up on me to give me the perp check or whatever, asking me a bunch of questions. When he asked me my name, he lit up like he'd caught me in a lie and maybe he'd get to use his nightstick yet, "T?", eyes all excited and posture shooting up. I said really rudely and really quickly, "No, it's Tieg with a 'g' at the end. T-I-E-G. I know, it's unusual." He asked my last name, too, to see if I was so quick on that lie. I'm sure he didn't understand what I said then, either, but I was quick and confident enough that he just rolled off and left me alone after that. Shit like that gets old.
Shit sucks.
I spelled a guy's name wrong the other day when I sent him an email about a job
This was because his name was listed incorrectly on the job posting site.
I emailed him again immediately after I figured it out to apologize, cause getting your name spelled wrong is hella annoying
I'm in Québec, and my name is Samuel Tremblay. Samuel is on the top 5 male names list in Québec for longer than I can remember and 1% of Quebecois are Tremblays. I probably have on of the most common name ever !
For my kids : I always liked Raphael, or Raphaelle if it's a girl
My grandfather's name was Julian. I've always liked it. His nickname/cattle brand was Lazy J (The brand was a J rotated 90 degrees clockwise). How awesome is that nickname? Awesome.
I did not know if I was supposed to apologize or what?
Speaking of historical figures, there's a Greek guy in my small business clinic and his name is Odysseas. That's pretty cool.
Well I am cool but rude... I'll have to add it to my list.
Also, why do people insist on "having trouble" with names like "Hiro" and "Rajiv" ? They're phonetic! I think most of them do it on purpose to either be racist jerks or to get a rise out of people like me...
Yep, it is, and by a good margin (That's what Wikipédia says)
And in regard to Champlain : I live in the city he founded, aweseome 8-)
We both have the same battle ahead of us.
My mum is Susan, to continue the Dave-Sue theme. They're divorced now, but still.
I like my name. I'll also settle for Dave, which I don't mind too much. Davy or Davie I cannot stand, because through primary school it was what the mean kids called me.
For a son I think I'd continue the David thing, even just as a middle name. I always really liked the name Adrian as well. For a girl, maybe something like Nina.
That's fucking retarded, because the younger brother would still technically be 4th in the line, he'd just be IV'.
My wife's allowing Locke Alexander for a boy.
In exchange, we get Ambrosia for a girl. At least I can call her "Amber."
Edit: Hrm.. maybe be a bit more clear on my choice. I picked Locke somewhat after John Locke. My wife thinks I picked it from FF6.
(I posted this in the failures of humanity thread a while back I think) When working at Wal-Mart I would often hear parents calling for their children. On this one particular occasion I happened to hear the one parent call her child by her name 'Euthanasia (pretty sure thats not how the mother spelled it)' I was so stunned I asked the mother if that was her real name. With a puzzled look she said "Yea, why?" I had no response...
I worked with this person who said she had a friend whose name is pronounced Shatheed. Well S's parents not knowing the best of English put the following spelling on his birth certificate:
'Shithead'
I can't imagine how much this kid was taunted; probably as much as a person with the last name 'Weiner'.
Nah, it should be Pi Inigo Edgar, so when it's written on official documents and registers it comes out as Edgar, PI.
...unless that was already the joke.
Coolest names I've seen... Lazarus, though the guy who had it was in no way cool. Also, Konstantine, who was some random German guy I traveled with in Cambodia.
There's a famous identity in mathematics: e^i*pi=-1. That was the joke.
I concur.
And don't forget the female equivalents:
Miffy, Buffy,..uh...Biffy?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_McKinley
I don't believe the 25th President of the United States was black .
My wife and I have pretty much decided that we'll name our kid either Liam or Emily, depending on gender.
IOS Game Center ID: Isotope-X
Man, I'm a biologist, I don't know these things.
I'm pretty sure the only thing she liked about studying English was going "I'm You!" and giggling for a while.
Anyway, I'm gonna have a baby soon, which will have a Japanese surname and a western first name (though one which has to work in katakana). I really don't like how every Japanese/English baby is called Naomi or Hannah or George because the names exist in both languages. It's so dull.
If it's a boy, probably Sam. Named after LOTR Sam. People make a funny face when I tell them that, which is fun. Also with his surname, kinda feels like Sam Spade. I can imagine him going 'Sam ----, PI'
And that is a good thing.
If it's a girl, not sure.
I've tried old Irish and English names, but none of the ones I like work in katakana.
I've been thinking about goddess names (Artemis, Athena), but the same problem.
Recently I've been leaning towards hippyish names.
Do I have the nerve to name our kid Rainbow? Or Rain?
Bear in mind the kid will be growing up in Japan, where people won't know hippies do that. It'll just be a name.
I'm more scared of what the English speakers in my life will say if I call my daughter Snow or something.
My brother's name is Brent, which seems pretty rare, but I don't know if it is. I only knew one other one in school and the only other one I can think of is Brent Spiner, Data on Star Trek. FYI, don't name siblings with similar names unless you like having everyone confuse their names. Also, according to the dictionary, Brent is the smallest species of wild geese. It was hilarious to tell my brother that when I was 8.
Growing up in elementary school with six other Jordan's in your grade, all of them being girls, was not fun to say the least.
It especially sucks that my parents were going to call me Seth, which is a badass name. They decided against it at the last minute because it clashes with my last name.
I had to deal with beauty pageant invites growing up, but I've gotten attached to my name.