[Opinions] Mitchell or Marshall?
Replies
Marshall
OF the two I'd choose Marshall, hands down. I can't stand "Mitch" (replace that M with a B)...
OF the two I'd choose Marshall, hands down. I can't stand "Mitch" (replace that M with a B)...
Mitchell, but I found both too surnamey.
Oh, neither.
Mitchell
I love Mitchell!
Mitchell
I don't like either of them very much, but Mitchell has some personal significance to me, so I'll go with that one.
I don't like either of them very much, but Mitchell has some personal significance to me, so I'll go with that one.
I like them both, but I would use Marshall, and not Mitchell. I never get them confused.
There's an older couple on my block (70s) whose surname is Mitchell, and the man goes by Mitch. Everyone calls him that, even his wife. I think it's a spiffy name for an old guy although it would not appeal to me on a kid. Their daughter named her son Mitchell, and he goes by Mitchell. The kid is now about ... 13? I think. It seems like a good name on him. He's a cute kid.
I think one reason I don't like Mitchell that much is because it seems especially surnamey - it's too obviously a form of Michael, and so I wanna know why not Michael. My neighbors have good reasons, but I don't. The other things I don't like about it are that Mitch sounds dated, like Gary or Steve, and also it resembles Michelle a little too much.
Marshall was on our short list for a boy - probably name #4 or 5 if we hadn't agreed on something else - and I'm sure we would have used it as a middle name if we had had two boys because my husband wanted to honor a Marshall. I even think Marsh is cool. March is a GP of mine. Somehow, it does not bother me that Marshall sounds like Marsha, or that it is dated, or that it means military - I would name those things as reasons to dislike it if I disliked it, but I like it enough that I don't care about them.
There's an older couple on my block (70s) whose surname is Mitchell, and the man goes by Mitch. Everyone calls him that, even his wife. I think it's a spiffy name for an old guy although it would not appeal to me on a kid. Their daughter named her son Mitchell, and he goes by Mitchell. The kid is now about ... 13? I think. It seems like a good name on him. He's a cute kid.
I think one reason I don't like Mitchell that much is because it seems especially surnamey - it's too obviously a form of Michael, and so I wanna know why not Michael. My neighbors have good reasons, but I don't. The other things I don't like about it are that Mitch sounds dated, like Gary or Steve, and also it resembles Michelle a little too much.
Marshall was on our short list for a boy - probably name #4 or 5 if we hadn't agreed on something else - and I'm sure we would have used it as a middle name if we had had two boys because my husband wanted to honor a Marshall. I even think Marsh is cool. March is a GP of mine. Somehow, it does not bother me that Marshall sounds like Marsha, or that it is dated, or that it means military - I would name those things as reasons to dislike it if I disliked it, but I like it enough that I don't care about them.
This message was edited 7/26/2016, 9:22 PM
Mitchell.
:)
:)
Marshall
xo
xo
Marshall, hands down.
Mitchell's not awful, but the common nn Mitch is so wimpy and molktoasty it isn't even funny, except it is funny. I picture Mitch falling to pieces if his paper clips aren't all aligned in the same direction on his desk, and he sits there ripping at his cuticles and popping Maalox like it's candy.
Mitchell's not awful, but the common nn Mitch is so wimpy and molktoasty it isn't even funny, except it is funny. I picture Mitch falling to pieces if his paper clips aren't all aligned in the same direction on his desk, and he sits there ripping at his cuticles and popping Maalox like it's candy.