I cannot understand the appeal of Assel. It starts with a$$! All I can picture is relentless lifelong teasing.
Also dislike [name_u]Harry[/name_u] & [name_f]Harriet[/name_f], although oddly enough I do like [name_m]Harrison[/name_m]. I usually find I like the full name but not the standard nn. As in⦠[name_m]Frederick[/name_m] is fine, but I donāt like [name_m]Fred[/name_m]. I dislike little boy nicknames as the first name. I donāt think an adult wants to be [name_u]Freddie[/name_u] his whole life.
I love [name_u]James[/name_u] for a girl or boy.
I love [name_m]Ransom[/name_m]. Itās a family name for me, but most people have a very negative reaction to it.
I like [name_f]Emma[/name_f], [name_f]Ellie[/name_f], [name_f]Sophia[/name_f], etc but feel they are too popular. I wouldnāt want to be one of 3 or 4 kids in class with same name.
I do like [name_m]Ransom[/name_m] after watching Knives Out. [name_m]Ransom[/name_m] is played by [name_u]Chris[/name_u] [name_m]Evans[/name_m] in a beautiful white cable knit sweater but the name is still a bit edgy which I like.
Yes, I generally donāt like tough masculine sounding names though there are exceptions like [name_u]Hunter[/name_u], [name_m]Colt[/name_m], [name_u]Remington[/name_u], [name_u]Wilde[/name_u]/Wilder, [name_u]Ryder[/name_u], and [name_u]Ryker[/name_u].
I probably wouldnāt use [name_u]Hunter[/name_u] - I just like the sound and the first kid I met named [name_u]Hunter[/name_u] when I was 7 was not masculine at all so thatās probably why I donāt associate it as masculine and didnāt think of hunting til I got older.
[name_m]Colt[/name_m] - I just really liked reading about horses when I was a kid long before I found out it could be a personās name but I donāt think I would use this name now
[name_u]Remington[/name_u] - sounds more upper class and british than masculine to me and I just seem to be attracted to these kinds of names for some reason
[name_u]Wild[/name_u](er) - I kind of like the concept of being wild and free for both genders and it makes me think of [name_f]Laura[/name_f] Ingalls [name_u]Wilder[/name_u]
[name_u]Ryker[/name_u]/Ryder - I think I just like these because I like a lot of āraiā names like [name_u]Rye[/name_u], [name_m]Ryland[/name_m], [name_u]Orion[/name_u], [name_u]Ryan[/name_u], etc lol
None of these are my absolute favorites so I probably wonāt be using any of these though
I donāt like [name_u]Rae[/name_u], [name_u]Ray[/name_u], [name_u]Rei[/name_u] (etc) or [name_u]Rain[/name_u], [name_u]Reign[/name_u], [name_f]Raine[/name_f]. They arenāt terrible but I donāt see the appeal or understand why theyāve become so popular as girls middle names.
I donāt know how controversial these are but here are some of the weird things I like/dislike.
I love [name_u]Clarke[/name_u] on a girl. I donāt know if iād be brave enough to use it, but I created a character with this name and now I really like it.
I like short kind of masculine virtue names on girls, like [name_m]Able[/name_m]([name_f]Abelia[/name_f]), [name_u]Valor[/name_u], and [name_u]Honor[/name_u].
James and [name_f]Charlotte[/name_f] used to be my favorite names, so the popularity didnāt bother me. Sadly, I liked them too much for too long so now they just seem boring.
I like weird boys names that end in i/y. like Peery, [name_m]Kenji[/name_m], [name_f]Rhody[/name_f], and [name_u]Eli[/name_u]
I donāt like [name_f]Amelia[/name_f] but I like [name_f]Emilia[/name_f]. ??
I also also really like boys names that end in S, see [name_m]Ferris[/name_m], [name_m]Harris[/name_m], [name_m]Remus[/name_m] and [name_m]Seamus[/name_m]
Some girls names based on books and my experiences just sound bratty/like a bully to me like [name_u]Andrea[/name_u], [name_f]Brianna[/name_f] and [name_f]Amanda[/name_f]
Some classic and nice boys names just sound boring to me like [name_m]John[/name_m], [name_m]Theodore[/name_m], [name_m]William[/name_m], [name_u]George[/name_u], and [name_m]Alexander[/name_m].
I donāt hate [name_f]Millie[/name_f], but I also love [name_f]Mildred[/name_f] and think [name_f]Millie[/name_f] would be weird in my accent. [name_u]Red[/name_u] could make for a cool nn!
@sgsg8 I love [name_m]Kenji[/name_m]! Also [name_m]Benji[/name_m] And Iāve liked the name [name_u]Honor[/name_u] for a girl since I met one with the name years ago- I thought it was both pretty and cool!
Also @anon68906791 Iām the exact opposite, lol- I donāt love [name_f]Mildred[/name_f] but do adore [name_f]Millie[/name_f]! I like it on its own or as a nickname for [name_f]Milena[/name_f].
I like [name_f]Beatrice[/name_f], but really dislike [name_f]Beatrix[/name_f], which seems to be the more popular spelling on here. Both the look and the sound are so much less appealing to me: [name_f]Beatrice[/name_f] has strength and history but also seems gentle and lacy, while [name_f]Beatrix[/name_f] is just overly harsh to me.
Thatās actually what I donāt like about [name_f]Beatrice[/name_f]. It feels very lacy (great word to describe it! Iāve been saying frilly, but didnāt seem quite right). [name_f]Beatrix[/name_f] has a lot more spunk to me, which is something I really like in a name.
Very true! [name_f]Beatrice[/name_f] is the medieval Italian version of the late Latin, [name_f]Beatrix[/name_f], so [name_f]Beatrix[/name_f] actually came first.
@futuremama@fearlessfirefly I guess a more accurate statement would be that theyāre two different variations that also have different spelling rather than ātwo different spellingsā per se, but theyāre not really two different names if they have the same origin/if one originates from the other.
Itās interesting that we both interpreted the differences between them similarly even if we like different versions! One personās negative is anotherās positive, I guess.
This comment will be a bit blunt, but I am not directing this at anyone in particular, do not take offence.
Middle names seem pointless to me. In the US (with the exception of some of the [name_u]South[/name_u] and perhaps larger, close knit families), they are rarely used. If anything, your middle initial matters more as documents will often require just it.