John Mattituck -- I love the name
John and I like the idea of a quirkier mn. But I'd like to see something that has a little more meaning to you than just, "my Mom was there once." You didn't ask for this, but I'm going to pick a nn from your great list that I think best fits a
John Mattituck, nn Hawk or Tuck.
Victor Swainland -- Wow. This sounds like a character out of a Tennessee Williams play:
Victor Swainland, Southern hunk. The "swain" part is especially appealing. And I like your reasoning for using it; very zen.
Victor Swainland, nn Dash.
Blaise Norman -- Right you are with the
Norman imagery. It fits beautifully with sophisticated
Blaise, although I'm getting a vague, blazing-village-after-a-Norman-attack kind of feeling. But I'm weird.
Blaise Norman, nn Pyro.
Martha Consuelo -- You and me both, my dear. I used to suggest
Consuelo when I started doing various internet boards. No one had any enthusiasm for my beautiful
Consuelo so I gave up. The "sway-lo" sound is irrisistible to me.
Martha make a lovely complement to it.
Martha Consuelo, nn
Mo? (= first and last letters of the combo) (
My niece
Maureen is a "
Mo" and I can tell you it is the cutest nn. We called her Momo as a baby.)
As for the list itself, you have tooooooo much free time on your hands. :-) Me too.
You should keep that list handy and when someone asked for help naming a pet you can post it. Great ideas in there.
Not all of them are strictly nns, though. Ex:
Linus,
Casper,
Conan,
Rex. In fact, these are pretty chic, sophisticated formal names, to me. But I understand others might use them as nns. I just hate to see them not get their due as formal names.