Baby Names

Article: Would you give your son a girly name?

Just saw this and thought of this board:

https://shine.yahoo.com/parenting/name-girl-taylor-name-boy-ashley-manly-men-151300416.html 

Sorry not clicky. 

Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml

Re: Article: Would you give your son a girly name?

  • Loading the player...
  • I love some of the more traditional masculine names that have gone to the girls.  The ones that I don't like (just for personal association reasons) are Ashley and Shannon.  

    I like Leslie, Dana, Kelly, Casey and Morgan on men.  I hate that this list is growing --  Riley, Jaden, Peyton, Carter. 

    Prudence
    Lilypie First Birthday tickers
    Otis
     Lilypie Third Birthday tickers
    Hank 
     
    Lilypie Kids Birthday tickers
  • I think once a name goes girl it doesn't come back.  But I think there's a big difference between picking a name for your daughter that isn't "girly" or too "froo-froo" without picking a name from the boy category.  And I live in an area where there's still lots of Bobbies and Billies for girls, not a fan at all!
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
    BabyFruit Ticker
  • I've known male Shannon's, Courtney's and Kelly's.  When you see a guy with what is considered a girl's name, it still works for them.  And none of these guys seemed any less masculine because of their names.  I still prefer Avery for a boy and would still use it on a future boy (if my DH went for it) even though it's gone over to the girly side. 

    imageimageimage




    Lilypie Maternity tickers

    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker      
      

    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • See, I don't consider most of those 'girly' names at all. I think that to a certain extent it is a regional thing as well- for example, when I lived in England, Ashley was most definitely a primarily masculine name and it was considered very 'American' (said like it was a bad thing) to have a girl named Ashley, in my experience at least. And in my area at least, I have never heard of little girls being named Parker, Elliott, Logan, Richard, Steven, or whatever other male names it is trendy to give to little girls at the moment. 

    I have known men and boys named Kelly, Courtney, Shannon, Ashley, Kerry, Darcy, Sidney, Meredith, etc, and have never thought twice about any of them being 'girly'. Where I live, names like Morgan, Riley, Taylor, and Cameron are almost exclusively used on boys. This LO is already named, but if we have a second boy he will almost definitely be Kelly (or possibly Kerry), and I could care less if someone thinks I gave my son a "girly name." All that would do, IMO, is show an ignorance of onomastics and etymology. (Yup, big name nerd here.)

     

    I also majorly rolled my eyes at the inclusion of Andrea, with the example given of Andrea Bocelli. He's Italian. In Italy, Andrea is a man's name pretty much exclusively. IMO you cannot compare Andrea Bocelli to, say, Tracy Morgan in terms of them having "girls' names".


    Lilypie First Birthday tickers Lilypie Third Birthday tickers 
    VOTE on my Name List
  • Its a great article. So many names that switch from male to female are considered "acceptable" on this board: Vivian, Lauren, Meredith for examples. While others are not: Morgan, Avery etc. To me this proves that all it takes is time for it to move into the acceptable category.

    (I am not saying I am happy about this, as I have heard of a few female Augusts and that is top of our list for a boy. But it is what it is.)

    Lilypie Third Birthday tickersLilypie First Birthday tickers
  • I feel like some boy's names are ok on girls and I think that some names that have become tradtionally feminine are still best on boys. I still prefer Morgan, Quinn, Avery etc. on boys more so than I do on girls. My top boy name right now is Cary. I also like Elliott on a girl. It's no big deal. If a name was once or ever was used for a boy or for a girl, then it can be for either, and certain people will have preferences for whichever sex it best suits.
  • I like that this article hits on the sexism that there is something 'wrong' with femininity on boys. That is what irritates the heck out of me when I see words like sissy or wussy used around here.

    We gave our son a name that sounds unisex or feminine (Francis).

    Married 9-4-04

    ***PM me for my IF history***

    Lilypie Kids Birthday tickersLilypie Kids Birthday tickers
    Lilypie Fifth Birthday tickers
  • I'm a big fan of hyper-masculine names for boys, so most of the names I'd even consider for a son (Atticus, Byron, Hugo, Ignatius, Marcus) aren't likely to "switch over" any time soon. Probably ever.

    I would name a son Morgan or Jordan in a heartbeat if DH was on board with it, though.

    VOTE on my Name List

    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker

    Pregnancy Ticker

  • imagealliejo725:

    I'm a big fan of hyper-masculine names for boys, so most of the names I'd even consider for a son (Atticus, Byron, Hugo, Ignatius, Marcus) aren't likely to "switch over" any time soon. Probably ever.

    I would name a son Morgan or Jordan in a heartbeat if DH was on board with it, though.

    I wouldn't be so sure...pretty sure I remember a couple days ago a poster ran into a female Byron! No name is safe these days, haha.  


    Lilypie First Birthday tickers Lilypie Third Birthday tickers 
    VOTE on my Name List
  • imagestrawberrytree:

    See, I don't consider most of those 'girly' names at all. I think that to a certain extent it is a regional thing as well- for example, when I lived in England, Ashley was most definitely a primarily masculine name and it was considered very 'American' (said like it was a bad thing) to have a girl named Ashley, in my experience at least. And in my area at least, I have never heard of little girls being named Parker, Elliott, Logan, Richard, Steven, or whatever other male names it is trendy to give to little girls at the moment. 

    I have known men and boys named Kelly, Courtney, Shannon, Ashley, Kerry, Darcy, Sidney, Meredith, etc, and have never thought twice about any of them being 'girly'. Where I live, names like Morgan, Riley, Taylor, and Cameron are almost exclusively used on boys. This LO is already named, but if we have a second boy he will almost definitely be Kelly (or possibly Kerry), and I could care less if someone thinks I gave my son a "girly name." All that would do, IMO, is show an ignorance of onomastics and etymology. (Yup, big name nerd here.)

    I also majorly rolled my eyes at the inclusion of Andrea, with the example given of Andrea Bocelli. He's Italian. In Italy, Andrea is a man's name pretty much exclusively. IMO you cannot compare Andrea Bocelli to, say, Tracy Morgan in terms of them having "girls' names".

    Yes

    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker

     

    Pregnancy Ticker
  • If the baby I am carrying is a boy, we are seriously considering naming him Loren, after DH's grandfather Lorenz.  With the name spelled this way, I don't see it as being girly or feminine at all. 

    TTC since 3-08 IVF # 1 Dec 2011 BFP DD born at 31 weeks 6-24-12

    FET #1 Dec 2013 BFN

    FET # 2 Feb 2014 BFN

    No more frosties

    IVF #2. September 2014

    PGD yielded 2 perfect 5d blasts

    SET November 9, 2014
    Nov 23, 2014. Another BFN

    Not sure where to go from here.

    image

    Lilypie Premature Baby tickers
  • I LOVE Loren. I knew a Robert Loren and that I thought that was a great name.

    image
This discussion has been closed.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards
"
"