[Opinions] Carron
Replies
I don't like it. Unless you have a particular attachment to this river, I'd find a different Scottish landmark to use.
I was trying to make Mingulay work, maybe for a mn, but then I found we were expecting a girl and so won't work for a girl.
I was trying to make Mingulay work, maybe for a mn, but then I found we were expecting a girl and so won't work for a girl.
I think of carrots, and carrion.
The On sound is unpleasant to me but I like it better than the En in Karen.
The On sound is unpleasant to me but I like it better than the En in Karen.
I feel like it’d work better for a boy. I don’t care for it much either way but I think it could grow on me.
Militaristic: I just think of 'carronade'. Karen is much nicer, and I'd be happy to see lots of little Karens running around.
Looks more like a boys name to me. On a girl it would sound too much like Karen because when people talk fast they tend to change final vowels into schwas. I was going to say Carrona could be a feminization but it looks like corona so maybe not...
Given that the Carron is the river right next to where three people died in a train derailment today, this is pretty on the nose, isn't it?
I didn’t think about it. I was in Carronshore yesterday for work and it reminded me of the river Carron
This message was edited 8/12/2020, 1:53 PM
I think it's ok, but would get mispelt and incorrect prounciation
I really like Caron, so Carron looks a bit misspelled. It also reminds me of carrots. That said, I still kind of like Carron, though perhaps prefer it for a boy.
Really hate
It reminds me of "carrion."
It reminds me of "carrion."
Same here
The spelling looks masculine to me.
In my accent Carron and Karen sound the same. I've also known a Caryn, Carin, and Karin, so Carron just looks like another creative spelling aside from the river association.
The name itself is fine, especially if you have a connection to Scotland, but I'd be more hesitant to use it now since "Karen" is having a not-so-positive moment.
The name itself is fine, especially if you have a connection to Scotland, but I'd be more hesitant to use it now since "Karen" is having a not-so-positive moment.