Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Baby names

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

If you often get a feel for a parent's social class/background by the child's name...

76 replies

BlueButTrue · 06/11/2017 20:01

What would you think of Vincent and his parents, before meeting them?

I use to think you could tell a lot by a name, especially surnames, but today I met a very posh Darius and Jayden set of twins Blush

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
ItStartedWithAKiss241 · 06/11/2017 20:03

I was shocked when my posh friends had a beautiful daughter, I asked what name they would have chosen for a son and they said Jenson Hmm x

Callamia · 06/11/2017 20:05

The only Vincent I know is Chinese.
That’s not enormously helpful is it?

semideponent · 06/11/2017 20:07

I would think Catholic as it's a saint's name. Class-wise, Catholic could mean anything.

Scabbersley · 06/11/2017 20:07

French

SimultaneousEquation · 06/11/2017 20:09

I would think French or Catholic. But neither in a judgemental way, just observing that Vincent is more common with both.

HollowCity · 06/11/2017 20:09

Vincent......ermmmm, Dunno really.

AfterSchoolWorry · 06/11/2017 20:09

I'd think named after a grandfather. I wouldn't be able to guess the social class.

girlwhowearsglasses · 06/11/2017 20:09

Well they may well be French or Italian. I think it’s fairly free of association - I think of Van Gogh - but Vince slightly less classy.

girlwhowearsglasses · 06/11/2017 20:11

I know Chinese children called Daniel, Leo, Vincent, Sinead and Jayden. No idea what that’s about but they are all from different families

Mayhemmumma · 06/11/2017 20:11

I really like Vincent/Vince etc. Could go either way class wise. Vinnie is great and super cute but maybe less posh?

Wiggypudding · 06/11/2017 20:12

Middle class.

BlueButTrue · 06/11/2017 20:13

Vincent isn’t a French name ConfusedGrin

OP posts:
AfterSchoolWorry · 06/11/2017 20:14

A lot of old Irish men are called Vincent.

greendale17 · 06/11/2017 20:14

Lower class

usernameinfinito · 06/11/2017 20:14

The only Vincent I know has an Italian-American father.

Ragusa · 06/11/2017 20:15

Vincent would be middle class or crunchy trustafarian.

DancesWithOtters · 06/11/2017 20:15

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

BlueButTrue · 06/11/2017 20:16

What is a trustafarian Grin

And why are people saying it’s of French origin? I cant find any online reference to suggest it is

OP posts:
DumbledoresApprentice · 06/11/2017 20:16

I’d guess Catholic but wouldn’t have a clue about class. Wouldn’t be surprised to be told they were very posh, lower working class or anything in between.

Smitff · 06/11/2017 20:17

What do you mean it isn’t a French name? Is Anne a French name?

SuperBeagle · 06/11/2017 20:17

Wouldn't have any preconceptions about Vincent. Could belong to virtually any class group and any ethnic group.

Blondielongie · 06/11/2017 20:18

The only Vincent I know has hipster parents Grin

It's very Katie whatshername off the old apprentice (what's her name??) to judge children by their names. seriously why can't I remember her name?

Sittinonthefloor · 06/11/2017 20:18

Try-hard but failing.

SimultaneousEquation · 06/11/2017 20:18

Um... Vincent is a pretty mainstream name in France. I know more French Vincents than British.

(And I love the way it sounds in French Smile)

Smitff · 06/11/2017 20:18

Sorry, posted too soon.

The only British Vincent I know is a cockney cabbie who’s around 62 yo.

I know 4 French Vincents, 35-45yo. I think it’s a much more common name in France than in the uk.

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.

This thread is closed and is no longer accepting replies. Click here to start a new thread.