We really like the name Braydon for a boy, or Breyden, but we know we'll end up shortening his name to Brady? How can we spell Brady in a way that will fit w/ the name Braydon or Breydon?
It seems like it would be easier to spell the name Braden, then Brady would look like a natural idea for a nn. Not to mention you'd get rid of some of those extra "y"s.
It seems like it would be easier to spell the name Braden, then Brady would look like a natural idea for a nn. Not to mention you'd get rid of some of those extra "y"s.
Ditto this, except I'm not sure how to spell it - Bradon or Braden. I've never really seen either one. I think Brady is fine as a stand-alone name, too.
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Things like this are where the "formal name" thing goes too far. I'm 100% against naming a child a nickname instead of a given name (Tim instead of Timothy, for instance, even if you never ever ever plan on calling him Timothy), but Brady isn't even a nickname, traditionally. You don't need a "more formal" version of it! It's a surname. If you're into using surnames as given names, it's a perfectly valid option all on its own. There is absolutely no need to retrofit it into a fake longer version.
Ditto pps who said Braydon/Breydon/Braden/whatever sounds tacky and trendy and dated.
Things like this are where the "formal name" thing goes too far. I'm 100% against naming a child a nickname instead of a given name (Tim instead of Timothy, for instance, even if you never ever ever plan on calling him Timothy), but Brady isn't even a nickname, traditionally. You don't need a "more formal" version of it! It's a surname. If you're into using surnames as given names, it's a perfectly valid option all on its own. There is absolutely no need to retrofit it into a fake longer version.
Ditto pps who said Braydon/Breydon/Braden/whatever sounds tacky and trendy and dated.
Wow. Impressive. I totally agree. When I opened this post I was wondering what the heck the op meant by shortening it...(?)
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Re: How can we shorten Braydon to Brady?
Just to point out that there are lots of nn's that aren't an exact spelling of the first name...
Elisabeth has several, but Betsy is an example
Thomas - Tom
Richard - *** (nms, but still a nn)
Lucas - Luke
So Brayden - Brady really isn't that much of a stretch.
true that!
exactly what i was getting at.
Soooo this. I happen to really love Brady though.
Agreed?
Another vote for this option.?
Ditto this, except I'm not sure how to spell it - Bradon or Braden. I've never really seen either one. I think Brady is fine as a stand-alone name, too.
This.
I also so, so agree with this.
To me, they are two separate names... Brady is not a nickname for Braydon. If you're calling him Brady, name him that.
This from someone who grew up at a Suzie who would have much rather been called Suzanne. Making the switch later in life is difficult.
Ditto pps who said Braydon/Breydon/Braden/whatever sounds tacky and trendy and dated.
Wow. Impressive. I totally agree. When I opened this post I was wondering what the heck the op meant by shortening it...(?)
I agree! This post confuses me a little.
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My nephew is Bradyn. He was named after BIL, who is Brady.
HTH.