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views on double barrelled first names

53 replies

holzyb20 · 27/07/2016 15:59

What's your views on double barrelled first names for a girl a friend of mine has made me question myself by tellin me it's stupid

OP posts:
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MrsCaecilius · 27/07/2016 18:07

Sound to be like a bell you'd have in an aviary, maybe one ring by a parrot?

Sorry, in the naff bucket for me, but I'm not awfully keen on hyphenated first names of youneek spellings. I'm not very cool.

NoCapes · 27/07/2016 18:09

Awful
Really really awful

LunaLoveg00d · 27/07/2016 18:10

Don't like them at all. Especially when the second half of the name is May/Mae/Mei, Belle, Rose or Leigh/Lee. Names like Sarah-Jane or Sally-Anne are OK. Modern, trendy, made up names like Destiny-Rose or Amazing-Leigh are not OK.

GoldPlatedBacon · 27/07/2016 18:32

Amazing-Leigh Grin

FellOutOfBed2wice · 27/07/2016 18:41

My Mum has a double barrelled name and hates it. Is very embarrassed by its tweeness and only ever uses the first half.

florascotianew · 27/07/2016 18:42

Avery as a name is a version of Alberich/Alfred (boys' names that mean 'elf counsel').
Averie-Belle is rather like calling your child a mixture of a misspelled boy's name combined with a cutesie and over-used female suffix.

Each to their own, of course, but why??

Pinklily1 · 27/07/2016 18:44

I'm not a massive fan and would associate the name now with the Tracey Beaker lady.

MephistoMarley · 27/07/2016 18:45

Really hate them, and Averie-Belle is especially awful. Averie isn't a name and anything-Belle is twee as fuck.

RiverTam · 27/07/2016 18:46

Are you actually pregnant?

venys · 27/07/2016 18:49

The names on their own are fine - but not double barrelled. In fact I dislike dB names - feels a bit 80s. But as others said, if you like it, go for it.

straightouttacompton · 27/07/2016 18:59

Sorry but they sound awful to me. Fortunately you haven't gone for the - Mae or - Leigh but it's still not great.

And everyone always refers to the children as the first parts of their names anyway.

redhat · 27/07/2016 19:05

Averie isn't a name. It therefore looks silly anyway. But then if a Z list celebrity has also used that same made up name it looks like you're copying/obsessed by her.

I'm afraid I hate double barrelled first names anyway and always think of them being pronounced in a US southern states accent.

septembersunshine · 27/07/2016 19:15

No from me. Just for all the reasons above.

It's a really odd name. Averie is just weird on it's own (I'm thinking bird cage) but added to Belle it's just a terrible mess. Can you imagine being called this? I would call myself Belle or Elle is my parents gave this to me.

buffalogrumble · 27/07/2016 19:21

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

notamummy10 · 27/07/2016 19:43

Averie is the other way you can spell Avery.

But Dani isn't the first person to spell it the way she has and she certainly won't be the last!

BadToTheBone · 27/07/2016 20:14

Double-barrelled first names are so hillbilly. Is your surname Clampet or Walton?

Sophronia · 27/07/2016 20:15

Agree it sounds like a bell in an aviary.

eyebrowsonfleek · 27/07/2016 20:27

notamummy10- OP has chosen Avarie not Averie . Is the "a" version also a known variant?

florascotianew · 27/07/2016 20:44

Avery (as mentioned above) is a version of a well-established male name. The 'b' in Alberich becomes a 'v' (the two sounds are very similar) and the final 'ich' - which can sound a bit like 'ih' - becomes 'ee', spelled 'ey'. So Alberich becomes Avery. [http://www.behindthename.com/name/alberich/tree]]

Changing the middle 'e' to an 'a' does not really make it a new name or a feminine one. Arguably, it also changes the meaning from 'elf counsel' to, erm, nothing.

Avarie-Belle is a bit like 'Robart-Belle' or 'Wulliam-Belle'- a well known male name mangled and mixed with a very feminine diminutive.

shartsi · 27/07/2016 20:51

I prefer Everly to ava-leigh

florascotianew · 27/07/2016 20:53

OP - A afraid that I missed the bit in your earlier post about a miscarriage. Am so very sorry to hear that and most certainly did not want to cause offence by my earlier comments re possible names. Perhaps I should have phrased them more gently.
All the best.

villainousbroodmare · 27/07/2016 20:58

Skanger, imo. Sorry.
Belle is fine on its own.
Averie, or even Avarie, but dear God, don't hammer Belle onto the end of it.

Ni58 · 27/07/2016 21:02

I like it x

Pauperback · 27/07/2016 21:04

Since you asked, double-barrelled first names are usually associated with the bottom end of the social class structure in this country - if that matters to you.

Personally, I don't like them because they sound both indecisive and a bit overdone, like someone who can't decide between necklaces and ends up wearing them both, even though they clash.

I quite like Avery on its own.

BackforGood · 27/07/2016 21:05

That does, indeed sound like a bell, in an aviary.

Personally I don't really like double barrelled names, but that's personal opinion I suppose. I can't think of a single teen / adult who hasn't dropped the 2nd part though, as soon as they can make their own decision, which says a lot to me.