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Re: British names
in reply to a message by LMS
I'm an American living in England, and those are some beautiful british names :) The only one that strikes me as 'too british' is Nigel, maybe Winston as well as it does conjur butler images for me ;)Imogen is a common welsh name, but I never thought of it as such, and my son has a welsh/celtic first name - Owen - and my American family loves it.From your list, my favorite is Edwin, it's one of my top 5 boy names :)
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Oh yes, Imogen is Welsh as it was originally Innogen. I do relate Imogen (this spelling) to England though, as it was believed to have first been used by William Shakespeare.
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I think that's true, about Imogen, Shakespeare did like coming up with names - quite a few are credited to him.I checked with my British husband - Edwin, which as I said is a name I love, was the name of a king of Northumberland so it's much better known in northern England that in the south and it hasn't been mainstream for a while, but still very English sounding I think. The kre8tive streak has certainly come over here though - in an art class for under 5s at the local library there was a 'Reychelle', 'Devonte', 'Owais' - many of the older British names are dying, though apparetly Olivia and Jack are still number 1 and seem quite British to me - http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=184 shows you the top 100 names going back years.
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