View Message

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

[Opinions] I agree with you
The smoking association is too much of a negative, even if it is supposed to help one quit the habit Nicolette would be better, but it's still too similar for me. Nicoleta is better or just Nichole / ColetteIt's not the word product-name I've heard been used. I once heard there was a spike in the 60s(?) for naming kids after a skin-whitener brand which is just... [cringes in racism]. I'll see if I can dig that one out if anybody is interested to know what brand it was---"one particular boogie will move mirror massaging with stirring crepe mixture, positioning loaves while in the furnace then toting items in containers" ~ best Russian daing sites (guest, 198.144.149.xxx) (2020)
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

A few years ago there was a cashier at my local supermarket whose name badge startled me: Vinoliah. With an h on the end. But - I didn't like to ask, so this is speculation - perhaps the h was there to humanise it, like Susannah, Rebekah, etc. Whatever: she had been named after a somewhat posh brand of bath soap.If you can find the skin-lightener reference, I'd be interested.
vote up1
Admittedly Vinolia sounds nice, but being named after soap is sad. Not as bad as cigarettes and skin-whitener, but it's sounds like you're naming her to have a career as a janitor. I found exactly where I got this information from;http://www.nancy.cc/baby-name/nadinola/There's actually several names, but the one that stuck with me was this... uncomfortable advertI mean they're both uncomfortable, but I think the advertising text for this one is worse. Poor Miss Empire State. She wins a beauty contest and gets "gigs" like advertising skin-lightening cream. What's worse, I can't find any other photos of her on the internet. I google the following;"dee simmons" "miss empire state" 1962and her legacy is this bloody product
vote up1
Horrifying indeed - thank you.
vote up1