I was wondering much the same thing, unless we are talking a non-Christian country Mark is going to be a permanently common name like John, Simon, Paul, and Mathew.
I think Piper is quite a reasonable name, even has a cute diminuative Pip. We have a guy called Dove working with us, now that must have been somewhat awkward to grow up with.
I just became aware of this one a few weeks back, through a newspaper or magazine article in which it was mentioned that a woman named her newborn this … concoction. I’m sure some people will think it’s so clever. :rolleyes:
My neurotic sister wanted to name her daughter Jazzelin, but it didn’t stick because my bro-in-law couldn’t remember it. The eventual name the decided on was still made up, but oh well. I’m just glad this one didn’t stick.
I like the name Piper.
It would be even sweeter if her middle name is Cub. And the parents were pilots.
On to a girl named Michael. There is a newscaster in Mid-Michigan out of Bay City whose name is Michael Anne. I always liked it, the name and the station. Little depressing news about Detroit.
I met a 30 something year old woman named Kyle. I felt sorry for her. That, too me, is a guy name.
One of my former coworkers name is Danni-Anne. Which I have always liked.
The name Beverly use to be exclusively a male name, then around the turn of 1900 or so, it started becoming a girls name.
Florenz/ Florence use to be a mostly guys name. Florence Ziefield and my Grandpa’s middle name. ( Mine too.)
Peyton use to be a guy’s name as Avery too.
Dorcas, which is a welsh girl’s name is old and lovely. I have heard of a black male teen named it and I felt terribly bad for him.
Jocelyn use to be exclusively a guy’s name. Now it is rare.
I have to have the dullest female name that ranks up there with Nurse Carmen and is the sister to his name. Joan just is phfffffffft. (and I have a brother John. How very …below average.
The big problem I see naming a kid Piper is that you’re dooming somebody to a lifetime of getting hit in the face with a pie, because everybody thinks they’re the first person ever to be that witty.
**MY ** name is Mikel. Mikel Lynn, in full. It’s pronounced Michael and in fact is a shortened, phonetic spelling of the Italian name, Michaeleane. Since I’m 37 I can get away with blaming it on Hippie parents but I’m actually named after my great-grandmother.
As for having rotten things happen, the worst that I had to put up with was being assigned to a guy’s dorm back in college. Oh, the horror! That only lasted half an hour. I guess my boobies gave me away.
Michal for a girl isnt bad, I have a friend named Michal-Anna. but the fact was, she also got a masculine middle name too, Ray. My thing was she wasn’t given another name that she could go by if she preferred. Meh, I guess my :dubious: -o-meter is a bit off.
I don’t think we should all have the same names, I just wish people would name children, not babies. Cutesy names look pretty silly on 40-year-olds. Nowadays, you’d probably be better off naming your child John or Elizabeth, rather than having one of four McKennas or Tylers in a class. FTR, I don’t think Piper is bad, but I think I’d like it better as a nickname for a more formal name.
Speaking of stupid spellings - I met a girl a few months ago who named her baby Jaykub.
This woman is educated, smart, and appears quite normal. Her husband insisted on the name Jacob, as it is a family name. She agreed but wanted to distinguish her son from all of the other Jacobs.
Oops, wasn’t done. There’s an Indian movie star called Dimple Kapadia, and when she had a sister, her parents wanted a rhyming name, in ultra-cute fashion. So what did they settle on?
Simple. I kid thee not. I’ve often wondered what would have happened if she had had yet another sister… there’s only really one option left which rhymes.
I’ve struggled with having a very unusual first name myself, which also happens to be very similar to a common girls’ name. I often get double-takes when I tell people my first name, and it occassionally gets “corrected” by well-meaning busybodies on forms. The number of times I’ve travelled by train under the other name are far too many to count. However, since they never bother to really check, it doesn’t bother me - except in some deep, nit-picking sort of way.
You do know that other cultures sometimes have alternative spellings for names, right? Jakub is a common enough Polish name, for example. Not sure about that mysterious Y, but…