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Baby names

Find baby name inspiration and advice on the Mumsnet Baby Names forum.

Ok gloves off.....Finch......what do u think?

74 replies

DottieRose · 21/05/2012 14:24

This is one that has been on the bottom of the list for some time but want to give it some thought before striking it off.....it's for a boy!

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
ggirl · 21/05/2012 14:31

prefer fitch
if that's a name

smother · 21/05/2012 14:42

It is a surname. And should be left at that.

nizlopi · 21/05/2012 14:58

Its a surname. Lets keep it that way.

boyfallingoutofthesky · 21/05/2012 15:20

It's the kind of bright-eyed little bird you get hopping on your bird table - not exactly very masculine! (although didn't some celebrity recently call their son Sparrow?)

Also quite hard to say and will get mistaken for Finn constantly (which is much nicer!)

WizardofOs · 21/05/2012 15:23

Wasn't the horrible bully in The Office called something Finch or Finchy to his friends. Reminds me of him.

Frontpaw · 21/05/2012 15:24

Its a little birdy not a little baby.

lisaro · 21/05/2012 15:28

Bloody ridiculous.

Trills · 21/05/2012 15:28

Finn, perhaps?

seeker · 21/05/2012 15:30

No.

squoosh · 21/05/2012 15:31

I'm going to be polite and say 'no'.

Voidka · 21/05/2012 15:32

Its a birds name - you might as well call him Tit!

RubberBandit · 21/05/2012 15:35

Awful.

Strike it off the list with confidence.

didofido · 21/05/2012 16:30

Been reading the Whiteoak Saga? I rather like it

SquishyCinnamonSwirls · 21/05/2012 16:31

American Pie?
I don't dislike it but it would make me think of birds all the time.

toboldlygo · 21/05/2012 18:25

It's a surname. I get 'American Pie' quite a lot.

mathanxiety · 21/05/2012 18:36

I like it. If Harper is a name then I think Finch can be too.

It sounds American east coast old moneyish to me; a boy called Finch would have a granny with an unlikely nickname and a great grandfather who was a major player in the Roosevelt administration, go to some very selective preschools and day schools, then boarding school; he would have his own sailing boat from about age ten, perhaps row for his Ivy League college...

civilfawlty · 21/05/2012 18:37

Love it.

PrematurelyAirconditioned · 21/05/2012 18:40

I love MN, because I'd never be able to respond to this without a Hmm emoticon.

And I say again Hmm

Born2BRiiiled · 21/05/2012 18:48

Hmmm. Sounds feminine to me. And not in a great way.

PrematurelyAirconditioned · 21/05/2012 18:52

Also, Pointless was doing a round on "Tits and Finches" today and the presenters were sniggering childishly so as far as I'm concerned it now means fanjo.

PercyFilth · 21/05/2012 19:27

It's not 'To Kill A Mockingbird' again, is it? The favourite book of so many people who had to read it at school and have never read another book since.

MrsAmaretto · 21/05/2012 19:38

It makes me think of birds

LineRunner · 21/05/2012 20:10

I saw the name Flair recently in an American novel.

welliesandpyjamas · 21/05/2012 20:14

Flair is nicer. Unusual but not too whacky. Would it go well with your surname, OP?

clabsyqueen · 21/05/2012 20:16

Don't do it!