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Naming Children These Days

DubCoffman62

Lazy Slob
I'm starting to notice that more and more people are abandoning traditional names and starting to invent names and giving them cute spellings. For example, a facebook friend of mine named her two girls Jayda and Blayze. It seems that everyone has to come up with something unique for their kid. What ever happened to Ruth, Helen, Gertrude, Betsey and Margaret? I've notice too that for boys names like Ethan, Dylan and Aidan are popular. I never knew anyone by these names when I was younger.
Anyhoo, just an observation.
 
DubCoffman62;1960000; said:
For example, a facebook friend of mine named her two girls Jayda and Blayze.

The only three jobs you can get with those names:

  • Stripper
  • Welfare recipient
  • American Gladiator
FWIW, this isn't a new thing. I work with college students, and some of the names I encounter are astounding. The number of spellings for the name Lindsey/Lindsay/Lynsey/Lynsay/Lyndsee/etc. (a name that didn't even exist 40 years ago as far as I can tell) would put many people in a perpetual state of facepalm.

Asshole parents think it makes their child unique. YOUR CHILD IS NOT SPECIAL.
 
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jlb1705;1960015; said:
The only three jobs you can get with those names:

  • Stripper
  • Welfare recipient
  • American Gladiator
FWIW, this isn't a new thing. I work with college students, and some of the names I encounter are astounding. The number of spellings for the name Lindsey/Lindsay/Lynsey/Lynsay/Lyndsee/etc. (a name that didn't even exist 40 years ago as far as I can tell) would put many people in a perpetual state of facepalm.

Asshole parent think it makes their child unique. YOUR CHILD IS NOT SPECIAL.
I encountered a Cindy recently that spelled her name Cyndi and a Megan that spelled it Meghign.
 
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jlb1705;1960015; said:
FWIW, this isn't a new thing. I work with college students, and some of the names I encounter are astounding. The number of spellings for the name Lindsey/Lindsay/Lynsey/Lynsay/Lyndsee/etc. (a name that didn't even exist 40 years ago as far as I can tell) would put many people in a perpetual state of facepalm.

Lindsey+Buckingham.jpg

This guy suggests that you go your own way.
 
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Interesting statistic I read a few years back in a study on African American names:

Today, more than 40 percent of the black girls born in California in a given year receive a name that not one of the roughly 100,000 baby white girls received that year. Even more remarkably, nearly 30 percent of the black girls are given a name that is unique among every baby, white and black, born that year in California. (There were also 228 babies named Unique during the 1990s alone, and one each of Uneek, Uneque, and Uneqqee; virtually all of them were black.)

http://www.slate.com/id/2116449/
 
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Gatorubet;1960072; said:
I knew a girl in h.s. named (phonetically) Oh-rahn-jay.

Orange.

We're Florida boys. We went to school with Shaniqua, LiQuita, Sjohn, Shaquita, Cashinja, and Jaquari. Some of the names I saw growing up cracked me up. Even more fun to watch old white male teachers pronounce them
 
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