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Denison
Yes, it's a surname name. Other than that, how obvious is the "venison" similarity? What would you pair it with? (Denison, not venison, that is.)
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I actually didn't notice the venison thing until you pointed it out- I was just thinking about the fact that I don't like Dennis. I'd probably use Denison as a mn, but if it was a fn I'd do something like Denison Oliver, Denison Paul, Denison Luther, Denison James, Denison George, etc. Any fairly usual mn that doesn't end with "on", "en", or "an".
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Venison isn't the first thing that came to my mind when I read it. What did however was Denison's Chili, which is -awesome-. If you don't mind the association to a delicious chili, it would make a nice boys name depending on the last name.
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Denison Grant
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Instant venison.But I'll give it a whirl.
Denison Anders
Denison Brian
Denison Eric
Denison George
Denison Laurence
Denison Oliver
Denison Quentin
Denison Richard
Denison Tristram
Denison Virgil
Denison Wmffra tee heeWow, I don't hate those. So basically I think it goes best with either something dated (because that plays up the Dennis part), or something pretty classic-sophisticated because it's pretty down-to-earth (venison's fault, and I'm getting dome denim vibe too) and that seems to create a good balance... even academic feeling in a few cases.

This message was edited 4/22/2011, 10:29 AM

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Hehe. Actually, I didn't think of "venison" at all. What I thought of was the brand of canned chili. If Denison isn't the exact name of it, it's really close.I not among the anti-surname ranks here at all, but I am struggling to see Denison as someone's name. I'll let it simmer a while and come back if I get a feel for it and any mn suggestions strike.
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Eh, I don't care for it. "Venison" didn't even spring to mind, but there is something about the name that sounds cold and aloof to me.
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