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.

Could Reggie work as an everyday shortening for Peregrine?

105 replies

LimeslemonsPomegranates · Yesterday 03:15

Is it mad, or do you think Reggie could work as an everyday shortening of Peregrine? Yes it is a bit of a stretch to pull a soft g from a hard g but there are stranger ones, like Teddy from Edward. Peregrine is quite a lot of name but an old name with some nice associations such as the falcon or the first mayflower pilgrim born in North America. I was going to put it in the middle family name slot but wonder if Reggie offers a more modern and unpretentious alternative to Peregrine as a first name. I dislike Perry as it feels like the wrong generation and I'm also visualising Kathy Burke. I'm not especially a fan of the name Reggie/Reg as a stand alone but I don't dislike it as a playground name. I'm not a fan of Reginald at all however. I quite like the contrast between Peregrine and Reggie, I could be completely wrong in how this comes across though.

I asked a few of my younger but university educated work colleagues what they thought about the name Peregrine and received answers along the lines of: Miss Peregrine's home for peculiar children/Isn't that a girls' name?/Like the bird?/Is that a real name? So I'm not sure it will carry any strong connotations for younger generations other than possibly sounding like a young adult fantasy character. On that note,: Morwenna + Peregrine? I wonder if this seems quite thematic or possibly a teensy bit alternative/glastonbury/pagan revival? Or just two romantic and old fashioned names? I have slightly less grand alternatives such as Ludo/Hector/Rafe/Edmund under consideration as well.

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
FunnyOrca · Today 20:27

At the point you are calling them Peregrine, just about any nickname is acceptable too.

StationJack · Today 20:31

@CaptainMyCaptain , I was responding to the poster who said it was 'very Cornish'. Your rather patronising post quoting me wasn't relevant either.

FazeleysRoyale · Today 20:53

Julian is nice and slightly posh although might be a bit old fashioned. Then he could be Joolz. I don’t like Peregrine and don’t think Reg would work.

user293948849167 · Today 22:36

Edmund is far nicer than Peregrine.
Not keen on the others on your list though.
But to answer your question no I don’t think Reggie works as a nn, it’s a very different vibe.
Reg could work at a push, prefer Perry though or just call him Peregrine.

mathanxiety · Today 22:50

Choose Edmund.

Reggie is a bloke name, and Peregrine is much more upstream troutish. Never the twain shall meet.

Morwenna and Edmund has a whiff of Narnia and the Knights of the Round Table (or at least ye olde mists of tyme).

New posts on this thread. Refresh page