View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] Re: American Sounding Names
Generally nickname-names are a very American thing - especially in the 50's, shortened forms like Jackie, Frankie, Susie, Eddie, Sally and Ernie were very popular. I'm sure those forms did chart back in the day, but they are much less popular now. However, whenever I see them (especially if they are compounded: Jackie-Frank, Susie-Jo, Sally-Anne) I find them to be extremely "American".
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

That's true, and kind of funny because nickname-names are really common in the UK right now, but not quite as common in the US.
vote up1
At my blog (link below) I posted a bit about the nicknames vs. longer names between the countries.
http://millennialkelly.blogspot.com/2009/11/usuk-on-longer-names-vs-nicknames-as.html
vote up1
I've noticed that too! At least in the UK BA's that some people post here. I think in the UK, nickname-names are being seen as hip and fresh again, while in North America they are still seen as somewhat dated, and are associated with babyboomer names and 1950's sitcoms. You Europeans are so ahead of the curve!
vote up1