Diff’rent strokes for diff’rent folks, I suppose. I got 2/3 of the way through your post and totally thought you were going to go with “G-L-O-R-I-A Gllllllllllloriaaaaaaa!” But hey, the Rolling Stones don’t figure into pop culture nearly as much as medieval religious hymns do …
Then again, I married into a family that included a guy named Richard. Not usually such a problem, but his last name is pronounced (not spelled) “Semen.”
I’m not a big fan of last names as first names anyway, but yeah. Riley, I can see. Reilly - sure. Rylee? What were you thinking, parents? (Of course, the same parents named their first one Emily when that was the number one name in the country. Clearly we are not on the same naming wavelength at all.)
My friend’s daughter was being harassed at school by a girl named Starioana. Did her parents want her to grow up to be a drag queen? Who can’t spell?
My friend’s kids are Ireland, Lincoln, and Georgia. I’ve never summoned the nerve to ask if it was a deliberate choice to give them all place names.
My sister has three girls. The first, they chose to name something they hadn’t heard for a long time so felt it was reasonably original: Hannah. There were two other Hannahs in her class, let alone her year.
The second they were more careful and checked popularity lists. Georgia was in a class with three others. Four in total!
They just seemed to unintentionally pick names right on the cusp of the zeitgeist. So the next time they went a little, but not too severely, unusual: Briar. Success at last. And I really like that name.
An article in the paper last week about a former addict/felon trying to better his life and get a better job and how hard it is to provide for his son with his record. It was pretty sympathetic until I saw the kid’s name was Jaccobb.
It makes me think, “Run to the light, Carol Anne!” Of course that’s to people above a certain age. Even so, the Matrix is dated a bit, as college freshmen were about 4 when it came out (!).
The middle name is pronounced: “UaaGhaaarAAAluuuuUUUKHaaargHgHraaaah”
I’m pregnant and have been laughing my ass off at the Baby Names board at Babycenter. My favorite so far has got to be the thread on “What do you think about Timberly?” which you KNOW I had to open. It wasn’t even “is Timberly a good name or a bad name”, it was “I saw a boy Timberly and really liked the name but I think it’s a better name for a girl.”
It reminds me of a clash between Kimberly and Tinkerbell. That poor kid is probably going to go through life calling himself Tim.
The weirdest name I’ve ever heard was never actually given - it wasn’t registered officially, but was in protest of [Swedish naming laws](Swedish naming laws).
Behold: Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmnckssqlbb11116.
A friend of a friend has a small son name Apollo. There’s no Greek heritage, they just wanted to name him Apollo. Yes, he was born right after the Olympics that Apollo Ohno did well in.
We enjoy giving our kids middle names that are actually audio/electrical measurement units. Our daughter’s middle name is Bel. If we have a son, his middle name will be Henry.
I bet little Crixus’s parents were watching Sparticus a year ago on Starz.
Landry is a fairly common last name in Louisiana so it really doesn’t surprise me as a given name.
I gave my son an extremely uncommon first name. He’s the fifth generation in my husband’s family to have it. It’s easy to spell and pronounce and I love it.