View Message

[Opinions] Perpetua
Thoughts? Pairings? Too religious for your liking?

https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/217493
"It is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves." - William Shakespeare

cottage
vote up1

Replies

Is Bridget Jones not a thing where you are?Here the films are cult classics and constantly on streaming platforms.She has a colleague named Perpetua and she wants to "staple things to her head" (not really, just a joke) because she's so awful to her. I always see her face when I hear the name.It fit her perfectly.Sorry, not a fan.
vote up1
i like it, though i wouldn't give it to a kid.
Perpetua Celeste
Perpetua Faustine
Perpetua Noelle

This message was edited 2/23/2024, 12:43 AM

vote up1
I have no idea what the religious connotations are. It just makes me think of the word perpetual. I don't think it's a good name.
vote up2
The meaning is rather ambitious, and the obvious nn - Pet - is undignified. Not a pleasant choice.
vote up2
What about Perrie and Petey as nicknames? Ettie?
vote up1
Ettie might catch on, though I don't enjoy it. Perrie seems too much of a stretch - not a stressed syllable, so unlikely to work. As for Petey ... it never happened as a nn for my son Peter, and I really don't think it'd work here either.
vote up1
Perry was the first one I thought of. It's natural for the first syllable to spawn the nickname even if it isn't stressed, like: Camilla to Cam, Alexandra/Alexander to Alex, Matteo to Matt, Elizabeth to Ellie, Victoria to Vicky, Nathaniel to Nate, Samantha to Sam, Penelope to Penny, etc. (And a lot of nicknames aren't even first OR stressed like Liam for William, Gail for Abigail, and Lottie for Charlotte, but I do think those would feel like a stretch if they weren't already popular).
vote up2
My problem with Perry includes pronunciation. Perry has a short e sound, as in get, but the Per- in Perpetua is the sound made by a happy cat.
vote up1
True. I think it's more 'Per' in Spanish but 'purr' in English, but I still don't think that would bother me since it's the same with Matteo/Matt, Nathaniel/Nate, Samantha/Sam, etc.
vote up2
Perhaps it's different because those nicknames you listed are all one syllable, whereas Perry is two.
vote up1
Don't like it, just too out there
vote up2
I like it. It also reminds me of Perdita. I see it is the name of a saint, and while I didn't know that off the top of my head I did automatically think it sounded Catholic. Not too religious to use though. Perpetua Maeve
Perpetua Elsbeth
Perpetua Rosabel
Perpetua Jane
Perpetua Fleur
Perpetua Willow
Perpetua Coral
Perpetua Catherine
Perpetua Madalen

This message was edited 2/21/2024, 5:30 PM

vote up2
It’s an old quirky English style name to me, like a character from a historical mystery/steampunk novel. I don’t get religious vibes at all (but maybe I’m missing a connection somewhere?).Not sure about pairings - could go plain and expected like Rose or Jane to counterbalance or could do another interesting name like Maeveline or Marceline, but probably not something that also ends in a.
vote up2
Perpetua Jane or Perpetua Marceline is gorgeous! I would totally use those two.
vote up1
I like it, I don't think it immediately jumps out at me as too religious without context
vote up2
It's one of my absolute favorite names, but I assumed I was its only admirer! I don't find it too religious because I think of it as a Latin adjective above all else.Some combos:Perpetua Enid
Perpetua Edith
Perpetua Amy (honoring)
Perpetua Sophie
Perpetua Violet
Perpetua Maud(e)
Perpetua Clare
Perpetua Cecile
Perpetua Ingrid
Perpetua Zoe
Perpetua Lenore

This message was edited 2/21/2024, 12:56 PM

vote up1
Perpetua Sophie and Perpetua Lenore is so beautiful.

This message was edited 2/21/2024, 2:02 PM

vote up1
Perpetua Amy is lovely.
vote up3
No it reminds me of the word perpetual.
vote up3
Same. It also brings to mind the term "perp" (perpetrator)
vote up1
No, I like it too it is in my PNL
vote up3