View Message

[Opinions] Dallas and Marlowe
I'm loving Dallas and Marlowe for girls, any MN suggestions?I know a woman named Dallas she's in her mid-twenties so I can totally see it on a girl, she's the only Dallas I know.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I like Marlowe quite a bit, but Dallas...not so much. A girl a went to high school with named her daughter "Dalice"...pronounced like Dallas. Ew. A mutual friend said, upon learning of the child's name "When you name a child something like that, it's like you *want* them to grow up to be a stripper"...hehe. I much prefer Pallas.
vote up1
Dallas is just horribly tacky for me. On a girl it seems like a Pornstar name.I really dislike Marlowe for a girl, but on a boy I rather like it. i wouldn't like it at all if it weren't for Christopher Marlowe though.
vote up1
Dallas = city in Texas where JFK was killed or tacky 1980s soap opera.Marlowe= the hero of Raymond Chandler's detective novels or the narrator of some of Conrad's novels. So 100% masculine and surnamey.
vote up1
They're trying way too hard.Dallas is trying too hard to be awesome and rough and cowboy/cowgirl-y. It screams, "look at me, I'm a tough as nails cowgirl! Whoo!" Marlowe is trying too hard to be cultured and knowledgable. Like Holden, it suggests that the parents stayed awake enough in their English classes long enough to earn a C and to catch a few names, and now want to use those names to look like scholars. It's just as much of a neon light as Dallas is.Understand, I'm not saying you are trying too hard or are failing English, or anything like that. I'm telling you the impressions these names would give me if I met a person named Dallas or Marlowe. The reality isn't that relevant, because it's the impressions of others that Marlowe and Dallas are going to have to deal with every day.They're also really out of place on a girl, or for that matter on any human unless that person happens to have the surname of Marlowe.
vote up1