Wilda
This name might be due for a return to popularity as it is exceedingly rare in use today. Since it was used most prior to the 40's, its current users are rapidly expiring. It is a very strong female name that may also mean "enduring" or "persevering". If you use this name, your girl will have the only name like it in her class. Since the old ladies who use this name are by this time clearly survivors, the name may give a young person some gravitas. If as some suggest, names shape those that bear them, it may well give strength of character. It is not a "pet name" but a name for an academic, a jurist, a doctor, a serious person. "Pretty" names may not be the best thing for women of the future.
Replies
I once knew a Wilga.Elderly woman, in Australia.
Yeah!
I love this name, but I spell it Wylda and prounouce it Wild-ah rather than Will-dah to avoid the Wildebeest connection.
I think you'll find most people strongly dislike it.
I love this name, but I spell it Wylda and prounouce it Wild-ah rather than Will-dah to avoid the Wildebeest connection.
I think you'll find most people strongly dislike it.
I once knew an Awilda. She would be about 65 or 70 now. I guess Wilda and Awilda are OK, but they don't appeal to me much. Can't really say why.
Wildebeest
Makes me think of a Wildebeest :/
Makes me think of a Wildebeest :/
Lol!
I have no idea why I burst out laughing at the word wildebeest, but I did.
I have no idea why I burst out laughing at the word wildebeest, but I did.
It has a certain charm to it, but it's still a bit dowdy. I can see a Wilda settling a claim out West with her family in the 1870's, or something.