View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] cries
in reply to a message by Sofia
Now the girls have taken Lachlan.. whats left! :( I know at least a dozen male Lachlans! I thought it was safe :(
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

PronunciationI wanted to mention that I don't pronounce Lachlan and Locklyn the same way. Lachlan is with a Scottish 'ch' as in loch, while Locklyn, is lock + lyn.
vote up1
Yeah, it's also meant to be pronounced lah-chlan rather than the law-chlan everyone goes for....
vote up1
Sound EXACTLY the same in my accent.
vote up1
Yup, I pronounce it the 'proper' Scottish way:-)
vote up1
Lachlan and Locklyn would be prn. exactly the same in Australia, where Lachlan is very common.
vote up1
I agree with you.Before long, I think we'll have to start naming our sons as numbers, as there won't be any boy names left."Meet my son 459242."
vote up1
Meet my son 655321!Sorry, I couldn't resist. :-)
Although Malcolm MacDowell was quite handsome in that movie... which made it even scarier, if possible...
vote up1
I'm joining you in the crying:-(
I mean after girls named Dylan, James and Michael what's left for the poor guys.
vote up1
How about Elizabeth, Mary, and Sophia?
vote up1
:-DJust because a name is used for girls does not make it inherently less feminine. I still have no problem naming my son Lochlan, James, Michael, Cameron, Morgan, Tyler or even Shannon - other than the fact that I don't like them, that is.Note: One of our favorite names, Ira, is often derided as being feminine. Ditto for Julian. We're still going to use them, because I don't a name being feminine as a deterrent.

This message was edited 12/20/2010, 4:35 PM

vote up1
Yeah, no kidding. I guess one always must find something new to be bothered about, otherwise one runs the risk of being happy, but I've been getting more bothered lately about the attitude of boys' names on girls being "hands-off" for boys than boys' names being used on girls, the idea that use by girls spoils or taints boys' names somehow. That's icky, man. Of course the sensible argument behind it is that immediate gender delineations are a desirable aspect of a kids' name, and while we're still living in a society where everything is colored by gender binary this is IMO a legitimate, non-icky concern. But the big question is whether living in terms of gender binary is a legitimate, non-icky worldview, and I think we're slowly moving in the direction of such a paradigm shift, as evidenced partly by the unisexification of sexified names. I'm less bothered now by boy names on girls and I'm quietly rooting for a countermovement of girl names on boys to rear its head.
vote up1
Ashley and Shannon on boys!I'm up for some switches--as long as it's not all one-sided. Since names like Alison and Madison have gone feminine, and none have done the opposite--as far as I can tell--names like Jayden have been created as a masculine go-to. And I'm really getting tired of hearing these -aden/-ayden names... (although Aidan by itself is generally okay).
vote up1