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[Opinions] Deliverance and Peaches also come to mind (m)
in reply to a message by Siri
Granted, I don't remember that you actually liked the name Peaches, but you were totally amazed to learn just what the slogan "Tasty Peaches" on your T-shirt actually referred to.More to the point, there was the little exchange about Deliverance as a name. I and MANY other people brought up the very widcespread and strong association with the movie "Deliverance" and specifically with the "Squeal, Piggy, squeal!" and you just seemed to put your hands over your ears and go la-la-la I can't hear you.The words you post as "names" seem often to be just random words you happen to like the sound of. All right. That's fine. We all have words we love the sound of. But just because a word sounds nice does NOT mean it makes a good name. Influenza, amenorrhea, amanita, and Mascara are all beautiful sounding words, but that doesn't change the fact that they have bad connotations and do not belong on people. Influenza literally just means "influence" and referred originally to the influence of the moon, but it was borrowed as the name for a disease.See what Siri is getting at?
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Thanks, and as for being immature for not liking my nameI like my name fine. It's a total pain in the ass in the professional world. Period. I'd be on the phone trying to order toilet paper for my work, and the woman would want to know what my name meant. I'd have to spell both my names every time I was at work. It was a royal pain in the rear. It's not that horrible of a name, and now I do appreciate it - but I will never, ever use it again professionally.
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I'm not crazy about my name eitherAnd I won't have anybody call me immature for it. It's tacky, for one thing. And over the phone, nine times out of ten it's misheard as Darla or even Carla. And while Roxanne is long-established and has a nice meaning, in my case it's after the prostitute in the Police song.
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Parents.My sister has a bad name as well - Jessica Sue. She now lies about her middle name and I don't blame her.What I do love doing is informing people of my siblings' names. They'll get all excited, wondering what the name is. And I'll remark: Ben, Chris, and Jessica. The look on their face is always priceless. Always.
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it's mostly relative, isn't it?I mean, Jessica might hate her name and probably hates that every time she turns around she runs into another Jessica, but to my mind Jessica is a beautiful name. And everybody knows she's female, everybody can spell and say it, and it's hard to make stupid jokes about it, unless you want to try for Jessica Rabbit and that's about twenty years out of date. Sue isn't my style but again, same as with Jessica. And at least she wasn't named after a fictional hooker. lol
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Jessica Sue as a whole name is what I meanIt's an incredibly country-bumpkin name, and she's anything but country-bumpkin. I used to call her Jessie Sue as a kid, just to harass her.And yah you're right. Your name is a lot worse. Jessica is a classy, if popular name, and she'll be dropping the Sue pretty quick.
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Tell her about my best friend, Kimmie Sue. FULL NAME = Kimmie Sue. :b
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you think that's bad?I knew a girl once called Kitty Sue. As far as I know that was her whole name.I have a friend named Dawn Lynn (lastname) whose mother had wanted to call her Kim Sue. She was talked out of it on the grounds that it sounded Oriental and they were a hundred percent white Okie. lol The funny thing was that with their last name, Kim Sue would have sounded like a Korean massage parlor.
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*snort*
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I do understand what she means, and her assocations to certain words (as well as others). I just don't get those assocations personally, and I don't think everyone would. I think it depends on the person, and their experiences. I really doubt I'd use Appalachia, I just like the way it looks, more then sounds.
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Well, I don't think it matters that not all people will understand the meanings and connotations of a name like Appalacia or Deliverence. I think what matters is that the majority will and then will wonder why you chose to do such a thing.
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