N
nodito
Guest
My question?petty and immature.
My question?petty and immature.
My reason, I think.My question?
no, not your question. saying the name Donald is forever tainted. petty and immature because of being a sore loser.My question?
Without commenting on The Donald, it is possible for a name to become that tainted. How many baby Adolfs do you see?Do you not like the phrase because in this particular case you don’t dislike the politician or do you think that in general it is not possible for a name to become so closely aligned with one infamous person that it becomes tainted?
I’m not a sore loser. I wouldn’t name my kid Herod or Adolf for the same reason.no, not your question. saying the name Donald is forever tainted. petty and immature because of being a sore loser.
Okay, so in this case, you don’t think the name is tainted because you don’t think the president elect is that bad, but in other cases you might agree that it’s possible for a name to be so negatively associated with a politician that it becomes tainted?no, not your question. saying the name Donald is forever tainted. petty and immature because of being a sore loser.
And Adolf!you think so? how cruel. I guess the same could be said for Barack.
Never MWAHAHA!!!Ugh. Could we have one thread without political connotations??? :banghead:
Spouse vetoed two:I can’t sleep.What are some baby names you really love, but can’t use? Either because of your surname, spousal veto, bad associations, etc.
For me:
Michael: we have the same last name as the basketball player
Jeanne, Joseph, Josephine, Jessamine: would sound terrible with our last name
Clara: multiple close relatives used this name already
Richard: abusive ex
Savannah: loved this name dearly until I met a Savannah with the nickname Savvy. No.
Melanie: too close to abusive relative’s name
A friend of mine, born in the early 1960’s, is actually an Adolf, but he goes by his middle name. It was his family’s tradition to name the first-born son Adolf, and that went back hundreds of years (long before Hitler). His dad had been born about the time the war started in Europe, so there hadn’t been as strong negative connotations then. He had debated not naming my friend that because of the negativity surrounding it, but he hated to let a family tradition die. So my friend is Adolf ‘John’, and goes by John.Without commenting on The Donald, it is possible for a name to become that tainted. How many baby Adolfs do you see?
Seriously? That’s pretty pathetic and immature to chose Lucifer over Donald…unless your concern was about the poor snowflakes that might be triggered by the name “Donald” and then bully your child.I’d honestly name child Lucifer before Adolf or Donald. Feeling kind of sorry for poor Donald Duck, though.
Any who, I absolutely love Adele. The name and the artist but there are no more kids in the distant future so perhaps a grandbaby name suggestion.
Edit: I also really like Savanah, but it means bed sheets in Spanish.![]()
With a change in spelling.I’d honestly name child Lucifer before Adolf or Donald. Feeling kind of sorry for poor Donald Duck, though.
Any who, I absolutely love Adele. The name and the artist but there are no more kids in the distant future so perhaps a grandbaby name suggestion.
Edit: I also really like Savanah, but it means bed sheets in Spanish.![]()
I’m wondering what’s going to happen with the name Osama. From my limited understanding it’s a very common name in certain cultures (akin to naming someone Peter or Timothy). That could make for some interesting intercultural relations.A friend of mine, born in the early 1960’s, is actually an Adolf, but he goes by his middle name. It was his family’s tradition to name the first-born son Adolf, and that went back hundreds of years (long before Hitler). His dad had been born about the time the war started in Europe, so there hadn’t been as strong negative connotations then. He had debated not naming my friend that because of the negativity surrounding it, but he hated to let a family tradition die. So my friend is Adolf ‘John’, and goes by John.
(My friend doesn’t have any sons, and said he’s sort of secretly relieved by that, because he admitted he wasn’t sure what he would have done himself.)
In places that it is common, it may well remain so. OBL is not universally hated away from the West.I’m wondering what’s going to happen with the name Osama. From my limited understanding it’s a very common name in certain cultures (akin to naming someone Peter or Timothy). That could make for some interesting intercultural relations.