What do you think about naming your child something that historically has been a nickname for another name. For example, naming a girl Mandy instead of Amanda, or Becky instead of Rebecca. Or for a boy, Rick instead of Richard, etc.
I think using a nickname as a given name is cute on a child, but doesn't do the person any favors as an adult. Think about the child's future. Judge Rebecca (Last name) sounds far more professional than Judge Becky (Last name). Would you vote "Thomas X for Mayor" or "Tommy X for Mayor"?
Definitely depends on the name. Tommy seems like a silly stand alone name, but Maggie, Molly, Rory (obviously), etc. work just fine from cute kid to professional adult.
Missed Miscarriage 9 weeks/Missed Miscarriage 12 weeks/Natural Miscarriage 5.5 weeks BFP 11/6/09. Rory Anne Born 6/28/10!
DS1 is named Hank, not Henry... just Hank. Do I think that Hank stands on its own? Yes, absolutely. Do I think that all NNs can stand on their own? No.
DS1 is named Hank, not Henry... just Hank. Do I think that Hank stands on its own? Yes, absolutely. Do I think that all NNs can stand on their own? No.
My daughter is Kate, just Kate. However, I think it's a different thing than the examples you were given...Kate is actually a name.
"Hello, babies. Welcome to Earth. It's hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round and wet and crowded. At the outside, babies, you've got about a hundred years here. There's only one rule that I know of, babies. God damn it, you've got to be kind."
- Kurt Vonnegut
I agree with the others, it depends on the name. But I think in 99.9% of the situations it's something that I wouldn't do. Then out of that maybe 50% of the time do I think it's alright.
I've spent my whole life saying, "No, my real name isn't Harriet. My name is Hattie. Yup. Just Hattie."
THIS! Except I am Beth. Not Elizabeth. Not Bethany. Just Beth.
My mom's reasoning: my maiden name is very long (10 letters) and Elizabeth _______________ was too long. I now have a short LN. And my brother married an Elizabeth.
Gah.
evelyn 4.2010 | will 1.2012 | baby BOY due 12.2014
Definitely depends on the name. Tommy seems like a silly stand alone name, but Maggie, Molly, Rory (obviously), etc. work just fine from cute kid to professional adult.
I think it depends on what the name is. My name is normally a nickname, but it's my given name and I love it. I'm Tori and people ask me often if it's from Victoria and I have never minded explaining why my parents just named me Tori. They didn't want anyone trying to call my Vicky. Plus, I was a preemie and they decided Victoria Elizabeth was too long a name for such a tiny baby, so why not just name me what they were going to call me.
I think it depends on what the name is. My name is normally a nickname, but it's my given name and I love it. I'm Tori and people ask me often if it's from Victoria and I have never minded explaining why my parents just named me Tori. They didn't want anyone trying to call my Vicky. Plus, I was a preemie and they decided Victoria Elizabeth was too long a name for such a tiny baby, so why not just name me what they were going to call me.
What an excellent explanation!
Happily married to my Snorkelbutt - 07/31/10
BFP #1 09/02/11 M/C 09/12/11 8w6days BFP #2 07/18/12 Baby S born on his EDD 03/23/13
I chose the special snowflake option because it depends on the name in question. But I think I'd be on board for most of them. And a plus is you don't have to worry about what nickname your baby will get if you name them a nickname lol
I think it depends on the particular name. My name is one of those you mentioned (The full name) and i wouldn't like being solely the nickname, even though that is all I go by.
My HS best friend is Jenny - not jennifer - named after her grandmother, and for her it always seemed really appropriate.
It depends entirely on the nickname (whether I like it as a stand-alone name or not), but generally, I don't think there's anything wrong with it.
Let's dispell the myth, already: It's incredible, but people with nicknames for first names do go on to have careers and are taken seriously in their profession. Shocking, but true: employers care more about what's on your resume than the name on top of it.
I've spent my whole life saying, "No, my real name isn't Harriet. My name is Hattie. Yup. Just Hattie."
Annoying, sure, but it would be worse to be named Harriet
Wow. A friend of mine has a baby named Hattie... (like you, just Hattie)... I think it's so cute, and I never would have thought of Harriet! Love your name!
Re: Clicky Poll: Nickname as given name
Mainly I don't like this because I think it can lead to always being asked what your name is short for. As a teacher, this happened a lot.
I wouldn't go as far as voting for I hate it, but I am not a fan.
I've spent my whole life saying, "No, my real name isn't Harriet. My name is Hattie. Yup. Just Hattie."
Annoying, sure, but it would be worse to be named Harriet
BFP 11/6/09. Rory Anne Born 6/28/10!
SS: Depends on the NN.
DS1 is named Hank, not Henry... just Hank. Do I think that Hank stands on its own? Yes, absolutely. Do I think that all NNs can stand on their own? No.
It completely depends on the NN.
Exactly this.
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I agree with the others, it depends on the name. But I think in 99.9% of the situations it's something that I wouldn't do. Then out of that maybe 50% of the time do I think it's alright.
ITA.
What an excellent explanation!
BFP #1 09/02/11 M/C 09/12/11 8w6days
BFP #2 07/18/12 Baby S born on his EDD 03/23/13
SS - age 12...SD - age 8...DS - 13 mos.
I think it depends on the name but for the most part am for it. DD is Tess - not theresa or Tessa and I really love the simplicity of her name.
I would use Jack, Kate, Charlie, Sam, Nate etc all as given names...
I think it depends on the particular name. My name is one of those you mentioned (The full name) and i wouldn't like being solely the nickname, even though that is all I go by.
My HS best friend is Jenny - not jennifer - named after her grandmother, and for her it always seemed really appropriate.
It depends entirely on the nickname (whether I like it as a stand-alone name or not), but generally, I don't think there's anything wrong with it.
Let's dispell the myth, already: It's incredible, but people with nicknames for first names do go on to have careers and are taken seriously in their profession. Shocking, but true: employers care more about what's on your resume than the name on top of it.
Wow. A friend of mine has a baby named Hattie... (like you, just Hattie)... I think it's so cute, and I never would have thought of Harriet! Love your name!
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