Don't worry about being critical--I certainly am, and I welcome the company. ;)
I think of
Juliana and
Liliana as sort of nouveau yuppie names. They sound like the children of overly-indulgent, macchiato-drinking, Volvo driving soccer moms everywhere to me. They're "different" and "fresh" but
safe--no one gets ousted from the
chic playgroup with a
Lily in tow. The names are precious in the extreme to my ears, like the pwetty-pwetty-pwincesses their parents expect them to be.
And that's a huge, sweeping generalization, but when I see an -ana name, I just get this
feeling that the kid's going to be a spoiled brat with parents who think they're very cool and standing out from the crowd, when they've really just combined two insanely popular names to make a third. It's an instinctive thing, and a bit visceral, so if this doesn't make any sense, I apologize and will be happy to try and reexplain. :)
Array (a silly creature)
...And then he said, "You're independent, aren't you?"
"Yes," said Laura.
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.