Minor issue in that it isn’t an “ee” sound. Beyond that, it is way too much to think about when I’m on holiday. I just found it interesting that names are routinely made longer, which goes against what we have generally in English.
I wouldn’t trust that link at all, not only are there misspellings, but also the -is ending is really not pronounced “ese”. So, for example “Godsaker” (nice things) became “Godis”, pronounced go-dis.
As gigi said, Spanish does the same and those endings can be a diminutive (bosquecito: a small bosque or forest) or indicate affection.
Same for Catalan, in this case it’s -et(a): my great-grandmother was a Laura. One of her daughters, Laureta, had a Lauriteta… from Montserrat you get Montse, and sometimes you hear a mother yelling for Montseta to come on over this minute.
In Basque it’s -cho/i for men (sustitutive, so it doesn’t make the word longer) and -chu for women (additive, again the name gets longer), in Galego the again-additive -ño(a) (which is also the stereotypical ending for lastnames from Galicia).
It’s not just that *mal *= “bad” in Romance languages that might steer one away from the name Mal. If you’re English-speaking, you must have an association with maladjusted, malware, malcontent…?
Gotta throw a few in here. We know a family with a son named Tarzan. Actually, when you get used to it, it’s a rather nice-sounding name.
Saw a woman working in a restaurant, who had a nametag that read La Sonya. I thought, Had your parents never said it outloud??
Knew a Guatemalan woman who cared for two children named Cassie and Asa. I always wondered if she told her friends, They named their children Almost and That.
We had a Thai student named Thanapol, but his nickname was Boom. Kinda funny, but okay. Then his younger brother came to visit. He was called Bomb…
I only have one to contribute. In college there was a guy in the dorm room next to me whose first name was Governor. I can only assume that his parents were aspirational; however, so far as I can tell, he has not yet reached that office.
I have a cousin who named her first born daughter Alexis. Great! BUT insisted she be “nicknamed” Byrdie, with THAT spelling. Unknowingly, people called her Alexis as first meeting her as a newborn, until mom kept insisting they call her by her nickname.
Aren’t nicknames supposed to be formed organically and after the person develops some sort of personality befitting the name?
I pronounce ‘LaSonya’ and ‘lasagna’ differently enough that I wouldn’t have noticed the resemblance if it wasn’t pointed out here. LaSonya has an s sound and a short o as in ‘hot’, while lasagna has a z sound and a short a as in ‘hat’.
Yeah, though, probably close enough for middle school.
Not necessarily. Some are just picked as a flavorful way to ID a kid until they’re old enough to say their long name. Some are picked to distinguish from a parent/grandparent with the same name.
I know a family, they named their son “William Robert Seth ___”, and totally called him “BillyBob”. The plan was that he could then start going by “Seth” when he entered school.
I’m not sure it works that way. He’s going to be used to “BillyBob”, and then change what he goes by? Yeah, I suppose kids can totally decide they want to be called something else, just struck me as odd to go in with that plan. Plus, intentionally naming your kid “BillyBob”.
Oh, she totally got called “Lasagna” in middle school. We called my cousin Cassie “Casserole,” and her real name isn’t nearly as close. Of course, I got “Hi ya, Rivkah!” Grit teeth, don’t look bothered, even if it’s the 300,000th time that day.
I used to work at Oklahoma Publishing Company, which publishes The Daily Oklahoman newspaper.
The founder’s name was Edward LORD Gaylord. His son was named Edward KING Gaylord.
Talk about megalomania! At any rate, I told the strange name to some friends of mine, and one of them blurted out “How about that! My LORD and my KING!” Struck me as funny.
Also: Worked with “Precious”, “Promise”, and a primo hot babe named “Happy” who had a sister named “Lucky”.
Had a class with a guy whose name was Ardell, spelled “Rdl”.