View Message

[Opinions] Huntington and Imogen
I took my daughter to a ballet today and saw these two names. Both female. Thoughts?There were a few other interesting names, but I only remember these two. I love Imogen.The poets have been mysteriously silent on the subject of cheese. G.K. Chesteron

Replies

I love Imogen but Huntington is hideous. It is the name of a bank I use. I can see it on a boy. I don't understand why these -ton names are getting popular for girls. It is a thing in the American south.
Huntington, yuck! It makes sense alongside Remington and other such names.I quite like Imogen (and Imogene), though the perfectionist/pedant in me can't ignore the fact that the name arose from a misprinting of Innogen...
Imogen is very beautiful, as well as being inoffensive. That wouldn't have occurred to me if Imogen hadn't ended up next to Huntington (f)! I dislike lnfns in general, but this one takes the biscuit. I would bet my entire bank balance plus the sack of cat food that nobody would use Huntington as an everyday, ordinary name. It's too long and too clunky and will inevitably shorten, quite possibly (and revoltingly) to Honey. It could well be a family ln, or the name of a distinguished ancestor, but that's no excuse.
I don't like either of them. I think if I were named Huntington I would pine for a nicer, shorter personal name instead. Or at least a good nickname. Probably her name won't get confused with anyone else's, anyway. I might be willing to bet you some baked goods that when she's 13 or so, she'll change it to Quinn or Virgil or Lenore or something.I met a young Imogen about ten years ago (they were Aussies) and her mother called her Ibby. Too twee for my taste, but it's alright, just nms. I can see how it's appealing to people, being what it is, easy to say and having no "baggage" really. I don't care for Imogen myself because it starts just like "image" in my accent, and also looks like a name for a biotech company.
It does sound like a biotech company. Also Ibby is ridiculous, I hope she outgrows it. My nephew, Isaac, was Ikey all the way to 6th grade. Now I barely remember calling him that. I think Huntington was between 13-15, she was Alice. Probably older, honestly. I'm curious if she has a nickname.

This message was edited 4/21/2024, 8:11 AM

Huntington seems too place-name. Imogen is gorgeous.
I love Imogen a lot, but Huntington is blah.
Huntington makes me think of Huntington's Disease. Very awful. Imogen is nice.
I thought this, too!
I like Imogen. Huntington is a surname, very unusual to use as a forename.
Imogen is fine. Huntington sounds like a boy name and a surname.
That because you're right, it is a surname.
I strongly dislike both.
Imogen is nice, Huntington is terrible especially for a girl
Imogen is a fine name for a girl but Huntington is horrible. It sounds like a person with her nose stuck up in the air who thinks she's better than everyone else. I wonder if Huntington was the mother's maiden name or a family name?
I find it fascinating that Imogen is common in the UK, Aus and NZ but not in the US. I know about 6!
It is a pretty name.Huntington does not make me think of ballet at all! In fact it sounds very violent to me. I don't like it at all.
Imogen was popular in the U.S. in the 1920s. It wasn't super popular but not unheard of.
Imogen never crossed my mind when I was pregnant, but I wish it had!