View Message

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

[Opinions] Re: Bear and Lion
in reply to a message by Lily
Sorry and all that, but if you want to meet a lion, or indeed a bear, may I suggest the zoo?As for birth certificates, I know a woman whose parents would have named her Alexandra if their ln had been different, but they wanted something shorter, decided they'd always call her Zahn anyway, and put that on her birth certificate. They all lived happily until she started learning German at school; the rest of the class were delighted to discover that their classmate was a Tooth, but she felt strongly that her parents could have done better.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Almost every name in the world means something funny in another language or has elements in it that mean something funny. Kara means 'penalty/punishment' in Polish, for example. Should we now avoid tons of perfectly fine names because they mean something bad or weird in a language that the child might someday learn? That would be impossible. Also Zahn is pronounced with an TS sound in German, not with a Z sound. Doesn't sound the same at all.Lion doesn't even mean anything bad. It's not any different from other nature or animal names such as Brook, Summer, Autumn, Robin and Willow. Would you tell someone who wanted to meet a robin to go to a bird sanctuary? And yes, I know it's also a short form of Robert but it still sounds exactly like the name of the bird.All I was saying is that naming is a matter of taste and different people will like different names. I wouldn't mind at all to be named Tiger or something but would dislike something really boring or overused like Caitlin or Alexandra. To each their own.
vote up1