Love Keir ("keer"), for the sake of
Keir Hardy, the Labour politician. Also,
Keir sounds so dashing and handsome, a real heartbreaker. Variants
Cary and
Ciaran /
Kieran are wonderful too, especially
Cary.
Kerr ("kehr") is solely a surname to me. I don't see it jumping into personal name land. For some reason people here in the U.S. want to say it as "kahr," like the thing we drive to work.
I have no idea why the "ah" sound. If
Kerr is a family surname then it would be nice as a middle name. Other than that, I pass on
Kerr.
This message was edited 9/8/2017, 1:23 PM