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Margaret?
What do you think of Margaret?Do you like any nicknames? Meg? Maggie? Peggy? Greta? etc.Combo ideas?Do you like Margaret the best or one of the variants or a different language?

This message was edited 5/22/2012, 5:48 PM

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I only like it as a middle name. I say this because it feels kind of old fashioned and I don't like any of the nicknames for it.
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Favorite.Meg is my choice of a nickname, from the main character in Swiftly Turning Planet.
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As most people here I'm sure know by now, it's been my favorite girl's name for over 10 years and we've been planning to use it for our first daughter since we got married. In short, I just love the jewelly sound of it, the red color, the history and super classic feel, that it's feminine but strong, that it feels domestic and intelligent, and that I can picture it on any sort of person.I love it without a nickname, but we'd most likely use a nickname at least some of the time if we ever have a Margaret. My favorite nickname for it lately has been Margie, which I've always loved and think feels very fresh and upbeat, but I also really like Gretchen, Meg, and Mamie.I know I have some combos I like, but I tend not to make Margaret combos since we plan to use it. I do like it best of all the variants, but I also really like Mererid and Mairead.
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It's okay, but I much prefer Margarita or Marguerite to it. Marjorie is cute in a very old-fashioned kind of way. Gretchen is also cute, though it does remind me of a dachshund one of my aunts once had called Gretchen.
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I like Margaret just fine, however, I like the nns better. My faves are Daisy and Meg. My fave Margaret combo is Margaret Susanna which I think is just about perfect. I like Margarita and Marguerite, but still, I think overall, I prefer Margaret.
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Margaret Susanna is a just about perfect! It's very nice. :)
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Lovely name; would use it happily.Most Margarets I know go by Maggie if not by Margaret itself (my cousin, for instance). I quite enjoy Maggie. And I once knew a girl with the full given name of Peggy, which I found refreshing. When I was younger I liked the idea of Margot and Megan, but I've got over that. And I've never fancied Greta, Gretel, Gretchen etc.
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I'm not a Margaret fan. I don't hate it, but I don't get all the love for it. It sounds too harsh to my ears.However, I do really like Meg and Maggie. I would use them as nicknames for another name.
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I like Meg, Maggie, Margie, and Greta for nicknames!
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I have known two Margarets who went by the same nickname, but with a variation in spelling.One was Margi, the other Margy. That is pronounced with a hard G.This is a nickname I haven't seen mentioned, though.
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Oh, yes. Let's.Lurve Margaret. Honestly, I prefer the nickname Mag. I have a great-great-great-aunt called Aunt Mag who was apparently quite proper and particular.
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Mag! That's terrific. It's no-nonsense, but not excessively serious.
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Mag and Maggie just make me think of magpies.
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me too...Or servants.
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I love bird connotations!
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Well, okay...but please make sure to associate the name only with the American magpie. I had one too many run-ins with Australian magpies, who, during their mating season, like to swoop down and attack, pecking at the back of your head. And, before they do, they sit on a telephone wire or tree branch and stare at you malevolently, waiting for you to pass them, because they will only attack from behind. Left me with no love for the magpie!
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Never ran accross that! Could I ask, where, (roughly, if you like) did you live, during your time in Australia?mating season...we used to be told to avoid tiger snakes during their mating season, as they became Agressive!Believe me, I hoped to always avoid tiger snakes! and actually, never saw one, except in captivity. edited for typo.

This message was edited 5/23/2012, 6:57 PM

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We lived in Traralgon, Victoria. The bird attacks weren't constant throughout the year or anything. They happened for a short period of time, during the birds' nesting season. I used to take a five minute walk four times a day, to the bus stop and back again, and that's when it was a problem. One day, my kids and I got off the bus and started walking home, and we noticed a magpie sitting on the telephone wire, staring at us. Knowing that it wanted to attack, my daughter and I took off running and managed to get to the end of the street without it attacking us. But my son was afraid and stayed where he was. My daughter and I began yelling at him, "Run, Will, run!" He hesitated a little, fear on his poor little face, and then finally screwed his courage up and took off running. Sure enough, the bird swooped down and pecked him on the head. It was like something out of the movie "The Birds."They also attacked me a couple of other times when I was by myself walking from the bus stop. And my daughter told me that one attacked a girl during recess at her school so badly that the girl was sent home. There were hats made and sold to prevent the attacks. They were like a baseball cap, except that they had a flap hanging down the back, which had a face sewn onto it. This would prevent an attack, in that the bird would think it was a real human face, and be fooled into thinking that the human was facing it, and the birds never attacked from the front, only from behind when they couldn't see your face.I read that it's only a minority of magpies that attack, and it's almost always males. It may have been just one particular bird who hung out at that area who was attacking us, and as I said, it happened for just a short period of time.
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Thanks for replying!We lived in Tasmania. in Hobart, and a smaller town in the north of the state. I'm happy to have missed magpies.
Sometimes people used to tease us, the innocent Canadians, and warn us to be careful of Tasmanian devils.but you rarely see them, except dead on the road, as they are nocturnal, and anyway not interested in humans. They make a fearsome noise, though, and fight among themselves.
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The American onessuck too. They come and eat all the crops that farmers plant and cause massive destruction. They're big and obnoxious and rude and everyone out here hates them. :P I don't think it's a good idea to associate the name with American magpies either!
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Plus here we refer to magpies as "maggies". They are THE WORST. I have been attacked walking to school and swooped on frequently when riding my bike. I think it's when they nest and they're being protective/territorial. But I still love Maggie. I think it's a great nn.
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I love Margaret. It's a stately, beautiful name - and I like that it has so many nickname options.My favorite nicknames for it are Meg, May / Mae, and Mattie. I also like Meggie / Meggy, Megs, Megsie / Megsy, Greta, Grete / Griet, Peggy... (However, I dislike Maggie.)Margaret is my favorite form/variant of the name, but I also like Magali, Mairead, Maret, Margareta, Margarethe, Margriet, and Marguerite.Margaret Adele
Margaret Blythe
Margaret Cecile / Cécile
Margaret Cecily
Margaret Cybele
Margaret Delphine
Margaret Dilys
Margaret Dove
Margaret Elise
Margaret Eloise
Margaret Elowen
Margaret Elspeth
Margaret Eve
Margaret Helene / Hélène
Margaret Héloïse
Margaret Hesper

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This message was edited 5/22/2012, 6:30 PM

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Margaret itself has always seemed dowdy to me, but I do like the nickname Meg. That's the only nickname for Margaret that I like. The rest--Marge, Margie, Peggy, Maggie, are all yuk. I don't believe in giving nicknames as full names, and would never put Meg on a birth certificate, yet I would never give a full name I didn't like just to get to the nickname, either. Therefore, I would never name a daughter Margaret.
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