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Titus

26 replies

Kwini · 04/02/2010 11:41

Boy's name, after the Roman emperor (according to Wiki, for those who don't know: 'Titus's record among ancient historians stands as one of the most exemplary of any emperor').

I can see one possible problem with this name - anyone else?

OP posts:
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Merrylegs · 04/02/2010 11:42

Yes.

Tight Arse.

(That's the problem you were thinking of, isn't it?)

cyteen · 04/02/2010 11:43

Or Tits for short.

Kwini · 04/02/2010 11:43

Actually, no! But you make a good point...

OP posts:
weegiemum · 04/02/2010 11:45

I have a surname that includes the word 'tit'.

I was am a secondary teacher and it never seemed to be a problem.

Dh went to an all-boys grammar where they were endlessly inventive with nicknames. He said at least you knew what they were going to be about!

Romanarama · 04/02/2010 11:45

I know a Titus, and he was indeed called 'tight arse' the entire way through school. He doesn't seem to have suffered - he's a bit of a smug git

I prefer Telemachus

annasophia · 04/02/2010 11:46

You see, it only sounds bad in English because the i is pronounced as -ai...

In German it is pronounced Tee-tus and sounds ok.

Merrylegs · 04/02/2010 11:47

Teat Arse?

No, it doesn't get any better......

annasophia · 04/02/2010 11:47

and of course no one knows what tits are .

Kwini · 04/02/2010 11:52

Yup, it was Tits I was worried about!

Anyone out there who likes this one, nevertheless?..

OP posts:
sonniboo · 04/02/2010 12:32

I know a little German boy named Titus - pronounced Tee-tus. I like it pronounced that way.

monetinfebruary · 05/02/2010 00:04

No

lowrib · 05/02/2010 00:39

Tit-arse even!

tortoiseonthehalfshell · 05/02/2010 01:04

Titus Groan is your other problem.

mathanxiety · 05/02/2010 05:29

Typhus, tights....

boodleboot · 05/02/2010 08:23

Tit.

Tight-arse....

shame tho cos it is actually quite cool if you aren't immature but most people are....

Snowtiger · 05/02/2010 08:28

I think it's a great name.

I'd be worried about the 'tits' related nicknames too but children will always give each other horrible nicknames, whether their name includes the word 'tit' or not. My DH is Richard William and spent his whole school life being called 'Dick Willy', that's no fun either.

londonlottie · 05/02/2010 09:05

This reply has been deleted

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DorotheaPlenticlew · 05/02/2010 09:17

In itself, a good name, but makes me think of Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus (not a good association).

Would be more worried about the Tight Arse aspect, though.

On the whole would say it has too much going against it.

Merrylegs · 05/02/2010 09:20

Yes. But. Calling a child Titus is a bit like pinning a sign reading 'kick me' on his back.

Titus for a little kid - cute.
Titus for a grown man - could just about be cool.

Titus for a teenager? Ouch.

Disenchanted3 · 05/02/2010 09:23

I thought tinitus.

crap name

good for a dog though

londonlottie · 05/02/2010 11:14

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn

mumoftoomany · 05/02/2010 11:15

Agree with londonlottie's point about teasing - well said .

SE13Mummy · 05/02/2010 11:24

I've taught a Titus and wasn't aware of any nicknames being levelled at him (in a fairly ordinary SE London state primary).

cyteen · 05/02/2010 11:51

Merrylegs there was a teenage Titus at my school and he seemed to get hassle more for being a twat than for having an unusual name. Was a school with a high percentage of Blackheath kids though, so Titus wasn't really that unusual

SE13Mummy · 05/02/2010 12:00

Based on what cyteen's written maybe Titus is more mainstream than I'd realised... the school I teach at is only down the road from Blackheath.

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