it's the prim part
in reply to a message by Lily
Well, I absolutely love primroses, which I first saw on a February visit to Ireland years ago--they were everywhere, in the deepest, most intense primary colors--I've never forgotten. So to me the name has that much going in favor of it. Where I stumble is over the "prim" part. I have a hard time coming up with positive associations for all the connotations of prim, especially for a girl or a woman of any age, but now that I think about it, even for boys or men. I sort of associate prim with frigidity or hang-ups or being socially stilted......If not for all these associations, if I were basing my like solely on sound, I would probably like it as a human name, too. A similar name, to me, would be Tulip--not used that often, and why not, after all? But neither of the syllables that comprise the word tulip creates uncomfortable associations in the same way that prim does. For me.
And with Meadow, well I grew up on Meadow St, which happened to border a really big chain factory that operated 24 hours a day, with 3 shifts--shook the whole neighborhood with incessant pounding. So that trumps all the prettier wildflowerish associations that are commonly related to the word meadow. But I'm also aware that names ending in "O" are really popular right now--Hugo, Juno, Milo, Margo--so if Meadow were spelled Meddo (not recommending!) as well as having all the pretty associations, it would probably be heading for the top 100.
And with Meadow, well I grew up on Meadow St, which happened to border a really big chain factory that operated 24 hours a day, with 3 shifts--shook the whole neighborhood with incessant pounding. So that trumps all the prettier wildflowerish associations that are commonly related to the word meadow. But I'm also aware that names ending in "O" are really popular right now--Hugo, Juno, Milo, Margo--so if Meadow were spelled Meddo (not recommending!) as well as having all the pretty associations, it would probably be heading for the top 100.