In my experience, very few people care about meanings of names, outside of parents looking up prospective baby names. It matters to my wife to a certain extent, but very little to me.
Personally, I'd put much more weight on factors other than meaning.
SAIF Always Welcome
Diagnosed with PCOS: 10/03, On BCP to "treat" until: 7/09
Provera to end Cycles 1-9 (anovulatory)
Cycle #4 & 5: Clomid 50 mg FAIL
RE Visit: 2000 mg Metformin
Cycle 6:Forced Break, looking for androgen secreting tumor
Cycle 7:Clomid CD 3-10, 12-17 FAIL
Cycle 8: Clomid CD 3-10, Bravelle CD 12-24 Hyperstimmed
New RE: Put on Byetta, lost 23 lbs
Cycle 9: Financial Break
Cycle 10: Femara CD 3-7, IUI CD 17 BFP on 2/14/11, m/c 3/7/11
To me, it only matters to a point. We really like the name Lilith, for example, but the mythological context of her being some Mesopotamian demon and uber-seductress was a little hard to overcome.
We settled on the name Molly, which is a diminutive of Mary, which means "bitter." It's not really an overwhelming connotation, though. I think more people focus on the image a name conveys than the alleged meaning.
Sometimes meanings can be a little ironic though. My sister is Annette, which I've read means "graceful"--and she can be so utterly clumsy at times. My young nephew is Isaac, which means "laughter," and he has the funniest little giggle/cackle.
It means absolutely nothing to me. Half the time the meaning is one thing in one book or website and something completely different in another. The name we have chosen means something beautiful according to some websites and something weird on others. I just go based off if I like the name or not. Kids don't know what names mean and by the time they are old enough to, they will be old enough to laugh it off or just not care. I don't think it will do any damage.
Yeah it means nothing to me. My daughters name means son of the gray haired name. Madison= son of Matthew Addison= Son of Adam and those names are used all the time.
It means a lot to me. Sophia=wisdom, and DH and I (even before we were pg) talked about training our children to be wise and make good decisions. The name just worked
It doesn't matter too much to us. If it has a spectacular meaning, then great. If not, no biggie. It would only turn me off to a name if it meant something really awful, like 'demon child' or something.
I just want to give you a world as beautiful as you are to me.
The meaning is very important to me. It is a family thing. My niece has an American and Yuroba name, and it all ties in to a specific meaning. My future kids will as well.
Re: How much does name meaning matter to you?
We both like Cameron and Jocelyn before we looked up the meaning...
Cameron means crocked nose, and Jocelyn means little goth. BLEH!
Meanings really don't mean much to me. Or my mom, apparently. My name (Melanie) means "dark one".
And there always seems to be a lot of different meanings for each name. If you look hard enough, you can probably find a better meaning for Logan.
In my experience, very few people care about meanings of names, outside of parents looking up prospective baby names. It matters to my wife to a certain extent, but very little to me.
Personally, I'd put much more weight on factors other than meaning.
SAIF Always Welcome
Diagnosed with PCOS: 10/03, On BCP to "treat" until: 7/09
Provera to end Cycles 1-9 (anovulatory)
Cycle #4 & 5: Clomid 50 mg FAIL
RE Visit: 2000 mg Metformin
Cycle 6:Forced Break, looking for androgen secreting tumor
Cycle 7:Clomid CD 3-10, 12-17 FAIL
Cycle 8: Clomid CD 3-10, Bravelle CD 12-24 Hyperstimmed
New RE: Put on Byetta, lost 23 lbs
Cycle 9: Financial Break
Cycle 10: Femara CD 3-7, IUI CD 17 BFP on 2/14/11, m/c 3/7/11
To me it matters a great deal.
To me, it only matters to a point. We really like the name Lilith, for example, but the mythological context of her being some Mesopotamian demon and uber-seductress was a little hard to overcome.
We settled on the name Molly, which is a diminutive of Mary, which means "bitter." It's not really an overwhelming connotation, though. I think more people focus on the image a name conveys than the alleged meaning.
Sometimes meanings can be a little ironic though. My sister is Annette, which I've read means "graceful"--and she can be so utterly clumsy at times. My young nephew is Isaac, which means "laughter," and he has the funniest little giggle/cackle.
~Benjamin Franklin
DS dx with celiac disease 5/28/10
I just want to give you a world as beautiful as you are to me.
Zuma Zoom
They dont mean anything to me.
Brooklyn means Broken Lands ?:-/?
Me too.