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.

Sonny 🙂☀️

146 replies

Flowerymama · 25/01/2022 15:41

Hello 🙂
So ... I have found out I am having a baby boy. I am in love with the name Sonny. My hubby is going along with it but I'm not sure he is sold. I'm beginning to think it's not as nice as I thought and read lots of online things about how it's nice for a child or baby but not an adult 🙈
Please give me your thoughts and if anyone has any alternatives for a boys name ending in the "ee" sound.
Thank you!!

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Snowiscold · 25/01/2022 15:46

I agree that I think it’s childish, or like you couldn’t be bothered to think of a proper name. Obviously, it has nothing to do with the sun or sunny either.
Louis ends in an -ee sound and isn’t childish. I’m sure there are others but can’t think right now.

BadTimesAtTheElRoyale · 25/01/2022 15:49

I like the name I know a Sonny who is in his 30's and it suits him.
Other names ending in the ee sound are
Ronnie
Donny
Lonnie
Louis
Hughie

MiddleClassProblem · 25/01/2022 15:49

Makes me think of Sonny and Cher so I would think of it as childish.

blyn72 · 25/01/2022 15:51

No. It sounds silly.

The names mentioned above, ie Donny, Hughie, etc, are diminutives.
Louis is quite nice and classic.

Helpel · 25/01/2022 15:54

I know a sonny, currently aged 11 and no sign of him growing out of it. I think unless a name is ridiculously babyish (bambi anyone?) then it grows with the person.. just my personal opinion

SirChenjins · 25/01/2022 15:55

I don’t like it either - to me it sounds like a position in the family like mummy, daddy, baby, sonny, rather than a name.

Alternatives are Jamie, Archie, Louis, Harry, Henry, Brody, Charlie, Toby…there’s endless possibilities really.

MrsElijahMikaelson1 · 25/01/2022 15:57

Jamie
Archie
Alfie
Harry
Louis
Charlie
Henry
Toby
Could keep going, but no to Sonny for me

cptartapp · 25/01/2022 16:06

I know one and his siblings are Alfie and Poppy.
So no.

FlexibleWorkingDenied · 25/01/2022 16:14

@MiddleClassProblem

Makes me think of Sonny and Cher so I would think of it as childish.
Why do you think of it as childish when the Sonny you have named was a grown man?
MiddleClassProblem · 25/01/2022 16:29

@FlexibleWorkingDenied sorry typo! Wouldn’t!

FlexibleWorkingDenied · 25/01/2022 16:33

[quote MiddleClassProblem]@FlexibleWorkingDenied sorry typo! Wouldn’t![/quote]
Ahh I see ha ha Grin

Endlessrunner · 25/01/2022 16:35

we have a cat called Sonny and we always sing “you are my SONshine” ☀️

It’s great fun!

SoupDragon · 25/01/2022 16:36

@MiddleClassProblem

Makes me think of Sonny and Cher so I would think of it as childish.
He was actually Salvatore.
SoupDragon · 25/01/2022 16:37

I don't like it as a given name at all.

sociallydistained · 25/01/2022 16:38

I like it but know quite a few toddler and babies called Sonny now so it is quite in.

Skeumorph · 25/01/2022 16:39

Hmm. I like the feel of it in a way but agree - it's a bit silly and lightweight. It's a great nickname, but to give him no other option is a bit crap maybe?

Maybe another S name and Sonny as a short form?

I can't think of one though!!!

On 'ee' names, I love Roddy short for Roderick.

Skeumorph · 25/01/2022 16:39

Oh Salvatore is nice!

user1471604848 · 25/01/2022 16:40

My first thought was Sonny Corleone from The Godfather book.
It's a nice name - wouldn't stand out as weird.

perimenofertility · 25/01/2022 16:47

I'm not a fan, it sounds too nicknamey to me. I used to have a teacher at school who referred to all the boys as sonny so it also makes me think of that.

KurtWilde · 25/01/2022 16:57

I like Sonny but then I'm biased because we have one in the family and it really suits him.

lilikiki · 25/01/2022 16:58

I love the name sonny

Antiqueanniesmagiclanternshow · 25/01/2022 17:00

It's bloody awful

Storminamu · 25/01/2022 17:04

Don't like it. Very American too. I'd either give him a more traditional and grown up sounding y name like Toby or Henry, or call him something else and add the ie/y as a nickname - eg James and Jamie.

RJnomore1 · 25/01/2022 17:05

It’s becoming extremely popular round here (west Scotland)

Blackmagicqueen · 25/01/2022 17:06

It would be okay as a nickname but I dislike it as the only name.