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Baby names

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

Recent nutty names I have heard

483 replies

CockneySparra · 21/01/2011 14:23

Sigh-Anne.

I thought the woman was mispronouncing Sian, then saw the name written down. Sigh-Anne. I mean, what on earth...?

the other was a little boy called Ragen. As in Ronald Regan, but Ragen. Ragen? I am not a name snob, but I do draw the line at deliberately misspelling surnames and then using them as a first name! Grin

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themildmanneredjanitor · 21/01/2011 14:24

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TooManyButtons · 21/01/2011 14:25

Sigh-Anne. Words fail me.

Although I did recently meet two sisters called Lee-Arna and Ell-Arna.

Asteria · 21/01/2011 14:28

I just don't understand hyphenated first names - WHY WHY WHY? I went to school with lots of Mary-Annes, Emma-Janes and Mary-Roses - silly if you ask me!

twirlymum · 21/01/2011 14:29

Bronte.

Poor kid was called brontosaurus by all the others.

onimolap · 21/01/2011 15:05

I thought Regan was a Shakesperian girls' name.

I met a Karmani (boy) on the bus.

twirlymum · 21/01/2011 15:45

Regan was one of King Lear's daughters onimolap

Imarriedafrog · 21/01/2011 15:49

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twirlymum · 21/01/2011 15:56

You sure it wasn't The Sweeney? Grin

onimolap · 21/01/2011 17:07

Ah yes! I've never met a Cordelia in RL, though it's a nice name. Pity anyone who's saddled with Goneril.

SoupDragon · 21/01/2011 17:10

Sigh-Anne is a shocker.

talkingnonsense · 21/01/2011 17:12

Was it a misspelling of Cyan??

Helzapoppin · 21/01/2011 18:18

I met a Yorick at a party last week. He wasn't a baby though, he was twenty and American, perhaps it's more normal there (??).

Spidermama · 21/01/2011 18:25

I know a Mopsa.

She says her name is from a Shakespearean play but I can't remember which one.

When I first met her I was a bit Hmm but it really grew on me. In fact she was one of the people I consulted about having an unusual name when deciding whether to name my children.

Spidermama · 21/01/2011 18:26

I wonder how many people will say, 'Alas poor Yorick, I knew him well,'

onimolap · 21/01/2011 19:20

Spidermama: I thought I knew my Shakespeare pretty well, but I had to look that one up.

Mopsa is a character in Winter'sTale

Spidermama · 21/01/2011 19:35

Yes that's it. Well done!

KenDoddsDadsDog · 21/01/2011 19:50

Bronte is a Scandinavian name. Not so daft there!

KenDoddsDadsDog · 21/01/2011 19:53

Actually I'm talking bollocks. It's an Irish name, just happen to know a couple of Danish ones!

MrsvWoolf · 21/01/2011 20:01

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ShowOfHands · 21/01/2011 20:04

Regan in KL was a bloody nasty piece of work.

spidookly · 21/01/2011 20:08

Bronte is not an Irish name.

"when deciding whether to name my children."

What did you decide?

I hope you decided not to name them. Now that would be unsual.

crystalglasses · 21/01/2011 20:09

I find Hebe strange. Am I wrong?

KnitterInTheNW · 21/01/2011 20:09

Someone told me the other day that there was a birthday card on cbeebies for a child called...#

Tequilio.

MissBeehiving · 21/01/2011 20:20

Regan was awful. What about her Dsis Goneril? Wink

KenDoddsDadsDog · 21/01/2011 20:34

Baby name website said Bronte was derived from the Irish surname Prunty then came to be a first name. Sounds a bit odd but it's there.

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