[Opinions] Romney
Wdyt of this as a first name for a boy?
Do you think it’s more masculine or feminine or unisex?
Is it too surnamey?
Have you ever met/heard of anyone with this name?
I fell in love with it after seeing a girl on instagram named this but I prefer it on a boy. I usually don’t enjoy unisex names but since this one is so rare it doesn’t bug me too much. Also, there’s a male character in L. M. Montgomery’s Chronicles of Avonlea named Romney Penhallow which I think is why I prefer it on a boy (and any link to Montgomery is a bonus in my book!).
Thank you in advance!
Do you think it’s more masculine or feminine or unisex?
Is it too surnamey?
Have you ever met/heard of anyone with this name?
I fell in love with it after seeing a girl on instagram named this but I prefer it on a boy. I usually don’t enjoy unisex names but since this one is so rare it doesn’t bug me too much. Also, there’s a male character in L. M. Montgomery’s Chronicles of Avonlea named Romney Penhallow which I think is why I prefer it on a boy (and any link to Montgomery is a bonus in my book!).
Thank you in advance!
Replies
It’s far too associated with the politician. Maybe for a character in a book but not to name a child.
I would think of the US politician, or Romney Marshes in Kent.
My first instinct was to agree with previous responses and say it’s unusable in the us because of political associations . But on the other hand that didnt stop a lot of people from using Reagan and Kennedy. I still don’t like it though.
I agree it's ruined by being a surname of someone very well-known right now.
I would think it seems unisex, leaning masculine, like Riley - and yeah, too surnamey for me, about like Rooney or Raleigh is.
-ney surnames seem trendy, so it wouldn't be surprising as such ... except that it'd seem surprising because it's so associated with the [in]famous Romneys, to me.
I would think it seems unisex, leaning masculine, like Riley - and yeah, too surnamey for me, about like Rooney or Raleigh is.
-ney surnames seem trendy, so it wouldn't be surprising as such ... except that it'd seem surprising because it's so associated with the [in]famous Romneys, to me.
are you from the US?
Because here, Romney is pretty much exclusively associated with the Romney political family. George Romney was governor of Michigan in the mid-20th century, and his son Mitt Romney ran for president in 2012.
So no, I don't think of Romney as a fn, for a boy or a girl. I don't think it has an attractive sound either; the m and n so close just don't work for me. Also, the name is too similar in sound to Rodney, which I think is butt-ugly.
Because here, Romney is pretty much exclusively associated with the Romney political family. George Romney was governor of Michigan in the mid-20th century, and his son Mitt Romney ran for president in 2012.
So no, I don't think of Romney as a fn, for a boy or a girl. I don't think it has an attractive sound either; the m and n so close just don't work for me. Also, the name is too similar in sound to Rodney, which I think is butt-ugly.
American politics are well -known enough for people outside the use to know at least Mitt Romney, since he did run for president against Obama in 2012. Definitely not first name material.
Yes, this definitely doesn't work in the U.S. Otherwise, I would think it was acceptable, but not something I particularly like. If I did see it as a first name I would assume it was a boy.