View Message

[Opinions] Roy.
Wdyt? I had an amazing great-uncle named this and it's very much a name I would like to pass on. His first name was Royal...and there is no way that I'd ever use it. He only went by Roy and thought of his name as a joke.I am just really liking the name overall as well. It just has a neat aura to it - very earthy to me. Honest opinions.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

It just makes me think of an old (er, 50 or so) man.Either a redneck (guh, how I hate that word, but it's the best image I can convey) or a doctor who researches cancer. (The reason for the extreme difference in mental images is because I once played a guessing game with a classmate where I tried to guess his dad's name... and it was Roy. And he's a doctor. End useless anecdote.)I just don't see it as a name that fits you, KWIM? However, if it's to honor your uncle (especially one that you're so fond of), then I think that could trump all other perceptions.
vote up1
I'm not fond of it. It has a very hillbilly quality for me, and I picture it as being half of a double name like Roy Eddie or Donald Roy. Also, I don't think it flows off the tongue very well, I can't tell the difference between Roy and Rory easily.
vote up1
Second one (that I've read) who has said thatThat was a bit of a worry and one of the reasons I've stayed away from using Roy. What would your view be on a male Roi?
vote up1
RoiDespite its Hebrew origins as name, Roi looks very full of itself to me in a "Vive le roi" way. It wouldn't make a particularly appealing impression on me if someone named their kid "king."
vote up1
It looks misspelled, even though I know it isn't. Looks kind of like a nn, or like it was chopped off from some longer word/name. If you pronounce it the French way, which sounds to my ear something like Rwah, I like it even less.I'd almost prefer you use Leroy. lol
vote up1
Roi, pronounced as you say..is a common-ish last name in my area.
vote up1
Lol.Well, I'll strike Roi off unless I move back to the DC area.
vote up1
I have to be a voice of dissent and say I don't care for it. Roy is too down-home for me, a good ol' boy whose rednecked and rightwinged.
vote up1
That would be a worry as wellI might go for Roi just to distance myself from that stereotype.
vote up1
Ditto that.
vote up1
I'm going to have to go against the grain and say that I don't like it. It's one of those names that is both dated and flat-out ugly to me, kind of like Gerald, Ronald, or Larry. Roy has a sort of 1960's small-town corn-fed feel to me, and in a more unattractive than quaintly nostalgic way. An uncle of my mother's suggested that she name me Royal after himself. :-P His name was Roy, anglicized from Rocco.
vote up1
Roy Battyand I am not even that big a movie or sci fi buff. Anyway the character kind of reveals the potential of the name for me - ultra butch, with a hint of scary twistedness. I'm in favor.
vote up1
I like it. It's my brother's favorite name and has been for some time, so I figure I might have a little nephew Roy someday. :DI actually rather like Royal, too - but that might be because my high school was the LHS Royals, so it's a little bit of high school loyalty mixed with honoring for me. But since my brother has dibs on Roy, I'd never use it.But yeah, I think Roy is great and would be nice and kind of unexpected with all the Aidans/Jadens/Cadens/Braydens running around.
vote up1
It's nice, and it's great that you have such a good namesake for it (Royal is apalling however). Incidentally, Roy (possibly transcribed Roi?) is also a modern Hebrew name, quite common amongst young Israeli men.
vote up1
Roi's on my list. :-DDouble meaning. Ty. Remember, though, that Royal was born nearly 100 years ago, dirt poor, parents with no education and who were recent immigrants. So I understand why it was chosen.
vote up1
I'm sure Royal's parents had their reasons for picking the name, but in a modern context it would be a really awkard name, especially professionally.
vote up1
I knew a RoiHe was forever refered to as "Roi with an 'i'"
vote up1
I think it's nice. I used to know a guy named Roy, who was very nice and polite to me (although he was a trouble maker). I think it's very refreshing after all the trendies :)
vote up1
Roy is just so, unexpected. It's great :) I mean it's just so well known, easy and simple, but people have seen to have forgotton about it. I would love to meet a Roy, which I couldn't say for Royal I'm afraid!Though if you were to use Roy Allan, the Royal can be seen in there, just a thought.
vote up1
Not sure if I'd use Roy Allan.But it's an awesome idea, ty!
vote up1
I know a Roy who is very awkward so that's what I think of first.Association aside, I think it's okay. The "oi" sound sticks out to me, but the R softens it out a bit. It also seems a bit nicknamey to me. Not a name I'd use but it clearly is a wonderful namesake in your case. What if you used it as a nn for Reuben?
vote up1