Erin for a boy.
I met a boy today who name was Erin. I kind of like it WDYT?
Replies
Hmmm, I don't know about this one. It's too feminine for a boy, but too masculine for a girl, IMO.
There was a little boy at the school that I worked at named Erin. He was a kindergarten student and to be honest, with his long, curly, red, hair...it was hard to tell if the poor child was a girl or a boy. Teachers who did not know him were confused on more than one occasion.
Aeron or I think (as suggested above) that Ciaran is an excellent alternative. But ultimately you must decide how much the name and spelling of Erin means to you.
Aeron or I think (as suggested above) that Ciaran is an excellent alternative. But ultimately you must decide how much the name and spelling of Erin means to you.
It's strictly female to me, so: no. But I love Aran, Aron and Aaron.
As a person that grew up in around a lot of Irish Catholics, Erin is strictly female for me. Here they mostly sound the same except for the endings. -ron and -rin are pronounced differently although -ron is sort of pronounced like -run. But definitely not like an i. I wouldn't use it and I think a guy being named Erin around here would get a lot of strange looks.
Prefer Aran
No.
As mom of an Aaron, living in a place where Aaron and Erin are essentially pronounced the same, Erin on a boy leaves me scratching my head and wondering why.
It's not an overtly feminine sounding name so I can see it on a boy, but, country's are usually personified as feminine though, which makes me think it should really stay as a feminine name.
I pronounce Aaron - Ar-in not Er-in so it wasn't immediately apparent to me as a variant spelling. If his parents did mean it like this I agree they should have stuck with the spelling Aaron, but If they were wanting to honour irish heritage or something then that's not so bad.
I pronounce Aaron - Ar-in not Er-in so it wasn't immediately apparent to me as a variant spelling. If his parents did mean it like this I agree they should have stuck with the spelling Aaron, but If they were wanting to honour irish heritage or something then that's not so bad.
ditto
Prefer this for a girl. Isn't Aaron prn the same way? I think if someone wanted to use this name for a boy they should spell it Aaron because Erin is generally used for girls. That said, the name does look and sound unisex so I think that if more boys were called Erin I could accept it more as a boy's name.
I pronounce them slightly differently: Erin is err-in, Aaron is air-in. Actually, the last one is a mix between -in and -on, which I can't write out.
To the OP: I know a man named Erin as well. It's a bit like imagining a macho man holding a purple sequined purse to me, in that there's nothing necessarily wrong with it, it just makes little sense to me.
To the OP: I know a man named Erin as well. It's a bit like imagining a macho man holding a purple sequined purse to me, in that there's nothing necessarily wrong with it, it just makes little sense to me.
This message was edited 4/21/2009, 2:58 PM
I prefer Aaron