The Boofon Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 I don't think the stupid name killed her mate. I think it was the methanol.Her mate isn't dead. It's just her. They survived. Link to comment
boboisared Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Dunno, the shop keeper prob I.D'd her, clocked her made up 'chav' name, knew he could mug her off with dodgy fake booze. Therefore having a stupid name can be fatal. What did you call yours put of interest? You seem quite protective of parents with kids named 'Chardonnay', 'Beyonce', 'Versace' etc...The baby isn't born yet. I'm hardly going to go giving out the name of my child to a forum full of strangers either I'm not protective of it, just don't see why it would bother anyone else at all? Link to comment
Sonoftherock Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 1 Surnames for Christian names (exceptions to the rule sometimes, for example Fraser)2 Names that are deliberately mis-spelt just to be different - afro-caribbeans are particularly adept at this one3 Flash-in-the-pan names that will be fashionable at a snaphsot in time until a couple of years later folk cringe at them (see all the Kylies born around 1988-1990, and maybe the Tulisa's or Rihanna's of the current era)4 Names that are "cute" (especially shortened versions of longer names) and that are normally associated with small children which may end up embarrassing or setting them back when they become an adult. Mason is a shite name for a boy (some girls are called it too). Not because of its connection with the masons, absolutely nothing wrong with them, but because it's just "fashionable". A child is not a fashion accessory, one day that child will become an adult. Good post! When I lived in the UK, this sort of thing was the preserve of minkers or charvers... however, in Australia it's become the norm! Some of the names that I've heard since being here absolutely beggar belief. It seems to have been going for a while too, as I meet folk my own age with ridiculous names. It's hard to take a grown man seriously who's name is Brayden, Jai, Riley, Tyler, Cody, Brock or some equally ridiculous made up name. I've had to stop myself from bursting out laughing after being introduced to people for the first time. My girlfriends brother has just had a daughter which they called 'Mackenzie'! I couldn't believe it when I heard it! Bad enough name elsewhere... but in Australia, you're going to end up going through life known only as 'Macca'. As much as I love Australia - the Aussies just have no class about them whatsoever. In saying that however, sometimes this can be one of their most endearing features! Link to comment
boboisared Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Good post! When I lived in the UK, this sort of thing was the preserve of minkers or charvers... however, in Australia it's become the norm! Some of the names that I've heard since being here absolutely beggar belief. It seems to have been going for a while too, as I meet folk my own age with ridiculous names. It's hard to take a grown man seriously who's name is Brayden, Jai, Riley, Tyler, Cody, Brock or some equally ridiculous made up name. I've had to stop myself from bursting out laughing after being introduced to people for the first time. My girlfriends brother has just had a daughter which they called 'Mackenzie'! I couldn't believe it when I heard it! Bad enough name elsewhere... but in Australia, you're going to end up going through life known only as 'Macca'. As much as I love Australia - the Aussies just have no class about them whatsoever. In saying that however, sometimes this can be one of their most endearing features!Aren't all names 'made up' at some point though? Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Tup was spot on, kids get to the certain age when they view their parents as an embarrassment, it's just the way of the World. yeah if your a nerd or a dweeb. but cool folk like us will always be our kids heros. Link to comment
Bluto10 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 do you consider yourself an excellent parent, Bluto? ach its a general observation. some, obvs not all, parents go weird when it comes to bring up their offspring. Link to comment
Foster14 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Any name in an English speaking country which has a Z anywhere other than the beginning... Link to comment
Sonoftherock Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Aren't all names 'made up' at some point though? If you want to look at it like that, everything has to be made up at some point. In the UK, from a christian name alone you could pick out a minker, or a child who'd come from a family of Chavs. However, in Australia, it's just an amazing mixer as I described above! It's just something that's always tickled me! I'm off to Mackenzies christening in a few weeks - sure there will be plenty of other young families in attendance... in a perverse sort of way I'm actually quite looking forward to hearing some of their offsprings daft names! Link to comment
boboisared Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Aren't all names 'made up' at some point though? If you want to look at it like that, everything has to be made up at some point. In the UK, from a christian name alone you could pick out a minker, or a child who'd come from a family of Chavs. However, in Australia, it's just an amazing mixer as I described above! It's just something that's always tickled me! I'm off to Mackenzies christening in a few weeks - sure there will be plenty of other young families in attendance... in a perverse sort of way I'm actually quite looking forward to hearing some of their offsprings daft names! Incidentally I know more minks/chavs that are called John or James than any with 'strange' names. Link to comment
Sonoftherock Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Incidentally I know more minks/chavs that are called John or James than any with 'strange' names. So do I. Statistically, in the UK at least, names like John and James till massively outnumber names like Kayden, Jai, Tyler, etc... However, you know that when you do encounter a child with a daft name like that, you can almost, without fail, guarantee their parents will be absolute Chavs. There are some places that are worse than others too... Nottingham and Newcastle when I lived there were absolutely terrible for that sort of thing. Still not a patch on Australia though! Link to comment
Foster14 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Incidentally I know more minks/chavs that are called John or James than any with 'strange' names. Surely you'd be looking at percentages though? Link to comment
360 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 If I ever have a child it will be called Boris, regardless of its gender. Link to comment
ericblack4boss Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 a wee trick that works a treat with my 6 year old if she mis behaves then i tell her i'm going to phone Archie Knox, you should see the look ofsheer terror in her face, so my advice to parents, misbehaviing kids respond to the threat of Knox. Link to comment
Sheep#1 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Good post! When I lived in the UK, this sort of thing was the preserve of minkers or charvers... however, in Australia it's become the norm! Some of the names that I've heard since being here absolutely beggar belief. It seems to have been going for a while too, as I meet folk my own age with ridiculous names. It's hard to take a grown man seriously who's name is Brayden, Jai, Riley, Tyler, Cody, Brock or some equally ridiculous made up name. I've had to stop myself from bursting out laughing after being introduced to people for the first time. My girlfriends brother has just had a daughter which they called 'Mackenzie'! I couldn't believe it when I heard it! Bad enough name elsewhere... but in Australia, you're going to end up going through life known only as 'Macca'. As much as I love Australia - the Aussies just have no class about them whatsoever. In saying that however, sometimes this can be one of their most endearing features!Ha ha, I berated the 'name' MacKenzie earlier as the missus pal called her kid that! So a shit name like that isn't just the preserve of Oz. a wee trick that works a treat with my 6 year old if she mis behaves then i tell her i'm going to phone Archie Knox, you should see the look ofsheer terror in her face, so my advice to parents, misbehaviing kids respond to the threat of Knox.Tell her your going to phone Amanda Knox and really put the shits up her. Link to comment
boboisared Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Surely you'd be looking at percentages though? That's fair enough. It's a point though that I think folk are making generalisations based on a name. Link to comment
Ke1t Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 One of the wife's cousins just called their kid Mason. I really don't like that name at all. Personally I like old Scottish names... I'd happily call a loon Hamish, Angus... Dougal is a great name... DOUGAL! Link to comment
Henry Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 yeah if your a nerd or a dweeb. but cool folk like us will always be our kids heros. Are the two of you planning on adopting? I'm on my phone so I can't post the gay smiley. Gay. Edit: Link to comment
Foster14 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 That's fair enough. It's a point though that I think folk are making generalisations based on a name.Of course, and everyone has a different line at where a name gets a bit "silly" and you don't fancy their chances in life. I assume that line would be crossed for you with names like Moon Unit and Hashtag? Link to comment
Foster14 Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 : gay : without the spaces Harcus... Link to comment
looksgoodinred Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 i would adopt some kids. but i'm too old. Hamish, Kelt? Ham for short? Hammie? Hamster? ugh. Link to comment
King Street Loon Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Fud is such an under used / under rated word I like the word moist.I like both of those words when put together like this 'moist fud' Link to comment
Ke1t Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 i would adopt some kids. but i'm too old. Hamish, Kelt? Ham for short? Hammie? Hamster? ugh. It would be a sharp A as opposed to a soft a.... we don't say Haamish, we say hAmish. So, if anything, hAme... but that's not great either. I wouldn't shorten that, though... I think. Hamish would be fine without abbreviation. Be no doubts about his heritage with a name like Hamish. Mason or Brody or Logan... just meaningless monikers that happen to be (currently) popular. You call a kid Hamish and right off the bat... there's a Scottish kid, right there, I don't care if his surname is Wytkowski, Chen, or Runs with Wolves.... Scottish as a wild Haggis running up Ben Nevis on St Andrews Day in the rain. Link to comment
Sonoftherock Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 One of the wife's cousins just called their kid Mason. I really don't like that name at all. Personally I like old Scottish names... I'd happily call a loon Hamish, Angus... Dougal is a great name... DOUGAL! You've mentioned a several times that your wife is an Arab, or of that descent... Did you get your way with a Scottish name for your son, or did you go for something Arabic? Link to comment
boboisared Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Of course, and everyone has a different line at where a name gets a bit "silly" and you don't fancy their chances in life. I assume that line would be crossed for you with names like Moon Unit and Hashtag?I think the names silly but I'm not going to assume the family are minks. Link to comment
Sonoftherock Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Of course, and everyone has a different line at where a name gets a bit "silly" and you don't fancy their chances in life. I assume that line would be crossed for you with names like Moon Unit and Hashtag? Worst I've heard is 'L-a' - pronounced 'lah-dash-ah' Friend is a medical researcher and saw a patient (kid from a bogan family) going by this name. Link to comment
Sonoftherock Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 I think the names silly but I'm not going to assume the family are minks. Hashtag or Moon Unit - they are just downright crazy names - I'd suggest the parents would have to be mentally ill, or a highly revered celebrity, so far up their own ass that they've lost touch with reality. However, a Tyson, Tyler or Kayden is a high probability of being a charver. Link to comment
boboisared Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Hashtag or Moon Unit - they are just downright crazy names - I'd suggest the parents would have to be mentally ill, or a highly revered celebrity, so far up their own ass that they've lost touch with reality. However, a Tyson, Tyler or Kayden is a high probability of being a charver.Based on what though? Link to comment
Ke1t Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 You've mentioned a several times that your wife is an Arab, or of that descent... Did you get your way with a Scottish name for your son, or did you go for something Arabic? Scottish name... went with Calum. Not calling any kid of mine Fazeal or Muhammed or Naseem. Her Arab grandparents eyes lit up when they asked his name and we said Calum... they thought we had named him Caleb. Fuck that... not happening. You call him Caleb and he's an Arab for life. He's got the best bits from both races... blonde and tall from my side, brown eyes and skin that tans in about one second in the summer from her side. He's also got a bit of both temperaments. He gets the excitability of Arabs when he's irritated... he'll wave his arms and yell like a little Arab, but he'll steam in and take charge like the little Viking that he is. It's nothing short of amazing to see the genetics at play. There's a definite racial influence on a kids' behaviour... it's not just a physical thing, not just eye colour or skin tone or height... it's behavioural and psychological. He has my sense of humour.. he'll fuck with your head just for his own lulz,.. but he very much has his mother's short temper. I mean it's exactly parallel to hers, not just some similar behaviour pattern, I'm sure other parents notice this as well, but it is fascinating to see traits in your kid/s that just seem to automatically mirror those of the parents without any kind of deliberate input from the parents. Anyway, Calum... great name. Link to comment
Sonoftherock Posted May 17, 2013 Share Posted May 17, 2013 Based on what though? My own observations. Link to comment
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