LordSutch wrote: » Marian Finucane was just interviewing somebody named 'Moncon'. What kind of a name is Moncon?
amtc wrote: » A good friend of mine called her only child Gobnait. It is a family name but still.
Big Pussy Bonpensiero wrote: » A Tory MP has named one of his children Sixtus, which is his sixth child.......
byronbay2 wrote: » Down at Inchydoney beach a couple of weeks ago, I saw a toddler wearing a jersey with the name "Maverick" on the back. I thought it might be a nickname but no, his parents were calling him that.
LordSutch wrote: » Fachtna. Its just sounds so guttural.
LordSutch wrote: » Nightmare for the child as she grows up and lives anywhere outside Ireland. Actually, even inside Ireland it can spark debate as to the correct pronunciation. Irish names like that one^ cause chaos in peoples linguistic heads
LordSutch wrote: » Con, I just hate Con (abbreviation or not) I just think it sounds awful as a boy/Man's name. Con artist, it's a con, you've been conned etc come to mind.....
LordSutch wrote: » Irish names with the obscure spellings. Aoadbha, Caoimhseach, Concobharagh, or names like those with difficult spellings/pronunciations
LordSutch wrote: » Fachtna. it's like a cross between feck, fack & foch ... na
LordSutch wrote: » Its a con, you've been conned, swindled etc .... Then the question is, what is con really short for? is it always Cornelius, or might it be short for Conor, Connor or Connell? Or maybe the child is just called Con, full stop? I can think of better kids names than Con.
LordSutch wrote: » Pronounced La-leisha, or is it Layleisha?
LordSutch wrote: » Gobnait, Gobnet, Gobinet... Just sounds so Gobby.
LordSutch wrote: » Gobnait yuk
LordSutch wrote: » Wow! I honestly thought Gobnait was a 'made up' name from from the far wesht, from famine times/ from the pages of Peig. I'd put Concepta & Consumpta in the same bracket as Gobnait.
LordSutch wrote: » I always associate Sadhbh with Scythe, an old fashioned implement for cutting long grass.
LordSutch wrote: » Too close to Faecal for my liking.
LordSutch wrote: » Oriel (now 48 years of age) and to this day people still call him Aerial.
Deleted User wrote: » It's more than pathetic how you pop up in every thread to feign some harmless ignorance that always transpires to be one of your West Brit digs at Irish culture/language/independence. As shown in the above posts your obsessiveness is almost matched by your repetitiveness.
LordSutch wrote: » The people, scenery, fresh air + the fact that it's relatively peaceful ..... Nice country to bring up children.
bee06 wrote: » My husband has suggested Indy (after Indiana Jones) if we have a boy. I'm still not sure if he's serious or not and I also don't exactly hate it.
con___manx1 wrote: » If you want yr little boy to get bullied in school call him Indy. The poor kid will get an awful time.
fima wrote: » I really wonder about the kind of person that assumes a child will get bullied over his name. Everywhere we go people love my sons name (Indy) ... tbh the kind of person that would bully a child over his name is the kind of person I'm teaching my son to dismiss in life. He's nearly 4 now and surrounded by Jacks and Leo's, I'm glad he has a different name. His older brothers also have different names and they are extremely popular in school and around where we're from.
fima wrote: » My sons name, we love it. Not after Indiana Jones though. I am curious why you posted it in this thread though if you 'don't exactly hate it' ?
bee06 wrote: » Because firstly, my husband is talking about naming our child after Indiana Jones and secondly, I was expecting it would get strong reactions like it did.