Amos or Hugh?
Which do you prefer?
✧ Sparrow ✧
✧ Sparrow ✧
Replies
Amos. Hugh sounds dated.
I think both sound dated, but Amos is better imo
Neither, they are both really aristocratic-old-guyish.
Hugh just sounds like someone being surprised. "You won the lottery" - "Hugh?" It doesn't even sound like a name. And it is very Hugh Grant which is fine but also reminds me of old, posh men.
I choose Amos because I like Harry Potter and it sounds like a name at least.
Hugh just sounds like someone being surprised. "You won the lottery" - "Hugh?" It doesn't even sound like a name. And it is very Hugh Grant which is fine but also reminds me of old, posh men.
I choose Amos because I like Harry Potter and it sounds like a name at least.
I just looked up Amos' meaning and it is terrible :( I thought it meant "beloved" like Amy or Amanda but I was wrong
"load, burden" D: awe poor kiddies named Amos. Was this the Hebrew version of "Unwanted"?
This message was edited 10/28/2020, 2:35 PM
I don't know about aristocratic...
...My grandpa was named Hugh, he was the most rugged, hard-working, down-to-earth farmer boy ever. Maybe he was an anomaly..?
...My grandpa was named Hugh, he was the most rugged, hard-working, down-to-earth farmer boy ever. Maybe he was an anomaly..?
This is how I feel about the name. I feel like all I'm saying is "Ew"
I don't like the sound of Amos, and it's what I think of as a fringe-biblical name, probably most used by people who read their Bibles with focused intensity. So I'd never consider considering it.
I like Hugh a lot. Good vibrations - intelligent, thoughtful, diligent.
Trouble is, in South Africa (some) Afrikaans-speaking people (sometimes) have great difficulty with the letter H. They often insert it where it doesn't belong, like pihano instead of piano, and/or they can't hear it when it is present. I had a colleague once named Hugh who was a notorious gossip; I mentioned something to an Afrikaans colleague once, and she was startled and asked me how I knew. I said "Hugh told me" and she looked even more astonished and said "No, I didn't!". Her English was very good, close to mother-tongue proficiency, but it let her down at that point. Hugo doesn't seem to have the same effect, for some reason, but I prefer Hugh.
I like Hugh a lot. Good vibrations - intelligent, thoughtful, diligent.
Trouble is, in South Africa (some) Afrikaans-speaking people (sometimes) have great difficulty with the letter H. They often insert it where it doesn't belong, like pihano instead of piano, and/or they can't hear it when it is present. I had a colleague once named Hugh who was a notorious gossip; I mentioned something to an Afrikaans colleague once, and she was startled and asked me how I knew. I said "Hugh told me" and she looked even more astonished and said "No, I didn't!". Her English was very good, close to mother-tongue proficiency, but it let her down at that point. Hugo doesn't seem to have the same effect, for some reason, but I prefer Hugh.
Amos because it feels more substantial.
Hugh
I wouldn’t consider Hugo beautiful. It sounds like one of the non-inadvertently pretentious characters the young March sisters would have acted out in their attic.