SamMarlowPI
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,761
- Location
- Minnesota
first name is Jason...that goes back what? 2 or 3000 years in Greek Mythology? vintage...lollollollol
My Mom's best friend is French-Canadian and her Memere is my aunt Evelyn. Lovely...StaceFace said:I've always wanted to be an Evelyn. My great-grandmother, who emigrated from France during WWI, was named Leona, and I don't think that would be too shabby, either. I guess Stacey will have to suffice :eusa_doh:
Good one! Two classic old timey names with a unique twist :eusa_clapshortbow said:Had an aunt down Texas way named Pina Mae Earp. Always thought that sounded kinda vintage.
Jerekson said:An old hat box that I have has the name "Howard Eames" written on it pencil. Ever since getting that hat I have always thought that was the single coolest name I've ever heard. I've elaborated with that name so much since then, heck I've even created a fictional character after it. I should just change my name and be done with it...
Really makes me wonder what the guy was like.
64tonya said:Have any of you ever yearned for a vintage or era appropriate name? I know it is silly but somewhere along the way I decided on Hazel...I'm not sure why...I just feel like a Hazel. Oh come on, I know I'm not the only one...
Wooster said:I doubt he's known outside Holland, but here's a wiki article: Eise Eisinga.
Case in point...Some fellow students were commenting today that celebs shouldn't be allowed to name their children anymore, I wonder whyBinkieBaumont said:Nicole Kidman has named her little baby "Sunday Rose" rather hillarious really, given that a few years back the Australian Lamb marketing board were running TV adds where a Nicole look alike was told just as she sat down to Lunch that "Tom Cruise was on the phone,"Nicole" had to decide between taking "Toms" call or Sunday "Roast lamb" with the family, if only in real life she had gone with the Lamb instead of the Ham
The press are already calling the little imp "Sunday roast"
http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=3u5JYzAT5t4
My mom (a '30s baby) is Nancy Ann. It was inspired by an Italian relative named Annunziata, a name that often got Anglicized as Nancy, sometimes as Ann, sometimes as both.tuppence said:It seems that then names of women are more subject to fashion, however. In the '80's and 90's popular female names included Minnie, Florence, Bessie, Ethel, Edna, Lillian and Mellie. By the 'teens, Helen, Margaret, Dorothy, Ruth, Mildred, Frances, Rose, and Evelyn were popular. In the 'twenties, Betty, Virginia, Doris, Jean, Marie, Shirley, Lois, Irene, and Gloria entered the scent, and in the 'thirties Barbara, Patricia, Nancy, Carol, Joyce, Marilyn, and Beverly were popular, while in the war years Sandra, Carolyn, Susan, and Janet were common.