[Opinions] David or Daniel and why?
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Replies
David. Too many bad associations with the Danny’s of the world.
David! It’s one of my favourite names. Strong, classic, timeless, biblical, wonderful meaning.
David! It means beloved and Daniel has a way too religious meaning, but usually I would use neither.
David. In my opinion of course.
Daniel by a hair, both are family names in any case.
I like both, as far as classic names go, but David would get my vote. It had a soft spot for me, as my adopted grandpa growing up had this name and I have very fond memories of him. Plus I like the meaning a lot.
David ...
It goes a bit against my grain since Daniel is in my family, and David isn't.
If I were naming a son and it were down to these two, honestly I'd let the other parent pick. It's that close.
Daniel is a great name, however David is a great name, and also it's heroic and bright.
It's like the difference between Claire and Catherine, kinda. Catherine, like Daniel, is great, but just ... squishier.
I'd rather dance with a Dan. I'd rather be taught a difficult subject by a Dan. I'd rather have a deep conversation with a Dan.
But I'd rather date a Dave, and if I have to choose a surgeon to operate on me based only on his name I'd pick David.
It goes a bit against my grain since Daniel is in my family, and David isn't.
If I were naming a son and it were down to these two, honestly I'd let the other parent pick. It's that close.
Daniel is a great name, however David is a great name, and also it's heroic and bright.
It's like the difference between Claire and Catherine, kinda. Catherine, like Daniel, is great, but just ... squishier.
I'd rather dance with a Dan. I'd rather be taught a difficult subject by a Dan. I'd rather have a deep conversation with a Dan.
But I'd rather date a Dave, and if I have to choose a surgeon to operate on me based only on his name I'd pick David.
I like Daniel
I like both. My birth ln was Davies, so I used David as my son's first mn. In DH's family, there was a tradition for generations of giving a son an H name with Daniel as the mn, but calling him Dan or Daniel. I prefer Dan to Daniel, so I would have followed that trend, except for the H name, which I couldn't really warm up to. One name from the past that I remember off-hand was Harold Daniel, and I think also Herbert Daniel. I like Hugo, Hugh and Hamish, but not with our ln.