[Opinions] WDYTO Primo?
There was the post on honoring writers, etc, the other day and it started to make me think about Primo, since Primo Levi is one of my favourite authors. I also like the fact that it's easy to pronounce in different languages and quite uncommon. However, would it be right to burden a child with the name of a Holocaust survivor who committed suicide? Since the name is rather rare, would he never be able to truly overcome the Primo Levi association?
Replies
Primo is not my style. But if I were going to use it I would put it in the middle name slot.
Agree...
All I can think is "cousin".
All I can think is "cousin".
tritto
My first thought at seeing the name Primo in your subject line made me think of Primo Italiano. But, when I read your post I immediately remembered Primo Levi from books I have read and movies I had watched. If I am someone who knows who he is and have read about him and watched films about him but didn't immediately see him as my connection, then I think the kid will be fine...especially considering most of the general population have no idea who he is.
He might overcome the Holocaust survivor-who-committed-suicide connection, but he'd still have the Primo Carnera the boxer connection, and the sounds-like-an-Italian-salad-dressing connection.
I would save it for a mn, personally.
Primo Levi is a great namesake. He was brave, brilliant, creative--you couldn't ask for much more. Whether his death was a suicide or an accident is still being debated, so, all in all, I wouldn't worry about the Primo Levi association. I still wouldn't use it for a fn.
Despite Primo's usage as a name, it's uncomfortably close to numbering rather than naming for me. Primo is (dated) slang for something superior, which I know would bug me. It feels like a better name for a pet or a race horse than a child.
Primo Levi is a great namesake. He was brave, brilliant, creative--you couldn't ask for much more. Whether his death was a suicide or an accident is still being debated, so, all in all, I wouldn't worry about the Primo Levi association. I still wouldn't use it for a fn.
Despite Primo's usage as a name, it's uncomfortably close to numbering rather than naming for me. Primo is (dated) slang for something superior, which I know would bug me. It feels like a better name for a pet or a race horse than a child.
tritto.
tritto. nt.
tritto. nt.
agree
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