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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think that Britain should take a tougher line on certain children's names?

352 replies

floraeasy · 31/03/2017 21:08

I name this baby... Superman. And another one... Gazza.

Oh, and let’s call this little mite... Gandalf.

And why not throw in Arsenal for good measure!

All the above are British children’s real first names – and they have all been given official blessing by our liberal authorities.

In Britain, all names, however ridiculous, are up for grabs. Hence celebrities can bestow their children with the likes of Apple, Harper Seven, Zowie and Fifi Trixibelle.

babies

The General Register Office says there are no restrictions on parents - except for exceptional cases, such as a name which could be deemed offensive, when an official could refuse to register it.

But such unusual names could blight a child’s future, according to Professor Helen Petrie, from the University of York, who has studied the psychological effects of having an unusual name.

“I found that people with unusual names had a really hard time, particularly when they were children,” she said.

They described getting teased and how traumatic it could be - because all children want to fit in. But when they became adults, they are often glad that they have something to help them stand out from the crowd.

“People with very common names sometimes feel that they aren’t unique enough. So I think there’s a happy medium to be struck.”

So isn’t it time we took a leaf out of baby naming books from other countries and make such monikers illegal?

Here are some of the worst offenders that have been officially banned in their own countries, but that any Tombola, Dickdastardly or Haribo could call their babies in Britain.

• Lucifer, V8, Christ and Messiah are among the baby names rejected by New Zealand’s department of internal affairs. Disappointed parents wishing to christen their offspring with numbers (89), letters (J, I, T) and punctuation marks (*) were also given short shrift.

• Fish and Chips (twins), Yeah Detroit, Keenan Got Lucy and Sex Fruit also got the kybosh, though the New Zealand judges did allow Number 16 Bus Shelter and Violence.

• But the top of the NZ banned list must surely be Talula Does The Hula From Hawaii.

• In Sweden, there is a law preventing parents from naming their children Metallica and Elvis. But in a parental fightback, a couple attempted to name their child Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmnckssqlbb11116. Yes, it’s spelled correctly. We’ve double-checked! And apparently, it’s pronounced “Albin”, though we’re not sure how.

• In Italy, judges prevented a couple calling their kid Venerdi aka Friday. They reckoned the name - taken from Robinson Crusoe - would expose the boy to “mockery”.

• Over in Norway, a woman was thrown in jail for two days for giving her child the unapproved name Gesher aka Bridge.

• On the other side of the world, the Malaysian government banned the name Chow Tow. It sounds harmless enough, until you realise the translation is Smelly Head!

• But in China, a family wanted to keep their baby’s name short and sweet, by simply calling it @. Perfect for Twitter, we’d have thought.

• In Germany, the names Stompie, Woodstock and Grammophon have been turned down, whereas the similarly strange Speedy, Lafayette and Jazz were allowed.

• In New Zealand, a whopping 77 names have been banned. They include Lucifer, Mafia No Fear, 4Real, 2nd, 3rd or 5th and ‘.’ (or full stop!).

• But surely top of the pile (excuse the pun) of banned baby names is this from Denmark: Anus. Apparently, the judges thought the baby’s parents were trying to make an a**e of their offpring!

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/12/08/banned-the-world-s-most-ridiculous-baby-names_n_7379492.html

OP posts:
RortyCrankle · 01/04/2017 00:30

I wouldn't ban any - it's a great way to discover the thick parents without having to go to the bother of meeting them Smile

PickAChew · 01/04/2017 00:30

My next child will be called Biscuit Trytoohard Smith

ArcheryAnnie · 01/04/2017 00:31

Oh, and if I met a baby called Aubrey, I'd assume the parents were Age of Sail fans!

AndKnowItsSeven · 01/04/2017 00:32

Yesterday 22:40 SalemSaberhagen

I only read this thread to see how long it would take the old La-a bollocks to be rolled out. Page 2 may be a new record!

I don't understand the La-a can someone explain please.

AndKnowItsSeven · 01/04/2017 00:32

I wanted to call dd3 Aubrey but dh refused saying it was a boys name.

LoisWilkersonsLastNerve · 01/04/2017 00:36

I reckon everyone in the future will have Usernames rather than proper names. PickaChewJnr etc.

ItchyFoot · 01/04/2017 00:36

Supposedly some kid is called La-a and it's pronounced Ladasha. It's not true though.

reuset · 01/04/2017 00:37

I've heard of a Kenobi. As in Obi-wan.

There's also a few children/adults walking around called Yoda.

C8H10N4O2 · 01/04/2017 00:39

I wouldn't ban any - it's a great way to discover the thick parents without having to go to the bother of meeting them smile

I'd have spared you the trouble of meeting 'thick' David Bowie and Nicole Kidman and a number of others.

BadLad · 01/04/2017 00:58

la-a

If the Guns were around now, their leader would probably have been called @illa.

BadLad · 01/04/2017 00:59

If the Huns were around now, their leader would probably have been called @illa.

ErrolTheDragon · 01/04/2017 01:02

Zowie is surely just Zoe but spelt differently.

Surely not in the case of Zowie Bowie. It's reassuring that he's now better-known as Duncan Jones.

kali110 · 01/04/2017 01:25

Aubrey is also a girls name. I think it's beautiful. It's quite popular.

kali110 · 01/04/2017 01:26

AndKnowItsSeven it is a girls name Grin

ujnepkoztarsasag · 01/04/2017 01:37

My next child will be called "Brexit Gloriana".

It's no business of the state...

Doublevodkaredbull · 01/04/2017 01:44

I used to work with a Brilliant Pongo.

Great guy.

ScoobyDoosTinklyLaugh · 01/04/2017 01:53

People took the piss out of me in school for being called Emma (very standard Irish surname).

Keep the weird names!

dustarr73 · 01/04/2017 01:56

I think op if you want the state to have a say in names,you have to be prepared your next in line.

Where would they stop..The way i look at it,i gave my kids the names i like.Same way my ma and hopefully my kids will be able to make the same comic.

Incidentally how old are your kids op

hellokittymania · 01/04/2017 01:59

I had to laugh at some of these. And which celebrity named their child Fifi Trixibelle? I won't even say what I think it sounds like. And yes it is tame compared to others.

There is an Italian gymnast named Enus, pronounced like anus.

I work in southeast Asia and many people have nicknames. In Thailand you have porn as a nickname, I also know an ice cream , Houda {beer from Hue) and his younger brother coca.

There was a great article on NPR radio By the Vietnamese author Bich Nguyen in which she talks about her elementary school experience when she first arrived in the US. It is totally worth reading. Grin

And in France there was a little boy who went to nursery with I am a bomb on his T-shirt and his name? Jihad . The nursery complained and said he could not wear that T-shirt to school. It was on the news in France.

kali110 · 01/04/2017 02:01

*hellokittymania
Fifi trixibelle geldof

SuperBeagle · 01/04/2017 02:49

On the flipside though, OP. I have a very common first name and a very common surname. I'd love something less common.

Think Emily Smith. That's what my name's like. Only about a million other people have it.

Fennecfoxmummy · 01/04/2017 03:02

Aw I think 'different' names are lovely. I like that my son may never meet another Fennic. I don't think his name is outrageous and means something to us. Some love it some hate it. Maybe were thick Hmm

thecraftyfox · 01/04/2017 03:08

I deal with some amazing names through my job, my favourite are Nigerian families. A girl called Blessing or Miracle or Precious, it always makes me think how loved and wanted that baby must have been. Although I did deal with a family where the girls had these lovely names and then they had a brother called something very normal, like Stephen or George.

There are some more out there names and spellings (pity poor Jorjor) and Beau for a girl will never stop annoying me but I don't like the idea of lists of approved names. It wouldn't work in a country with such a diverse collection of cultures as Britain.

SuperBeagle · 01/04/2017 03:19

I deal with some amazing names through my job, my favourite are Nigerian families. A girl called Blessing or Miracle or Precious, it always makes me think how loved and wanted that baby must have been.

My DH owns a retirement village and one of his old residents (who was well into her 90s when she died several years ago) was named Precious.

He also had a Queenie. Full name.

He currently has a resident named Jon. She's a woman. It's not short for anything.

Somehow, I think we've become more prudish about names over time. Grin

BillSykesDog · 01/04/2017 03:27

I love those names that have cultural reasons and traditions behind them.

The ones which are Paula Yatesesque tend to scream that they're all about the parent and their need for attention than the child. And that they are determined to push a certain sort of personality on their child and pressure them to be a particular way when they've barely left the womb.