Help end medical misogyny. Sign our petition.

Help end medical misogyny.
Sign our petition.

Sign the petition

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Message withdrawn at poster's request.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.