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Re: Geneva
I can imagine really liking Geneva if I met a person actually named Geneva. I bet it would sound pretty cool then. Right now I think, like you did, eh, it's another place name. But it does seem a lot more classic and a lot less tacky than, say, London or Paris. I prefer Genevieve, but then it is my sister's name. The whole thing is kind of a mouth full though. My Genny goes by Genny or Ducky most of the time. Speaking of names you didn't think you'd like, I just finished a novel with a girl character named Merrick! I know that's that one of your boy name faves, but I was kind of drawn to it for a girl. Re: Vaughn - no, I don't like it. I find the word itself unattractive.
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Was it Anne Rice, or another book? And, was the character born with a tail? Heterochromic irises? Magic powers? lolThe first time I heard the name Merrick as a first name was in about 1987 when I met a girl (about my age - 16?) who called herself that (I doubt it was her real name - not much about her was real). So the original girl Merrick wasn't Anne Rice's character - I'm not sure who it was. Maybe one of Rice's early books had one in it? Anyway I immediately felt that the name was really a guy name, and this girl called herself that as an affectation, because she wanted to seem edgy and gothy. I just thought it was really appealing as a boy name.Deliberately using names unconventionally on girls, has always been an affectation. (It's becoming that way for boys too?) So personally I think the name Merrick on a girl sounds embarrassingly characterish, though I see its appeal. I think Merrick comes off witchy and "edgy" on a woman because of the Mer- being familiar as a piece of a feminine name, and the -rick so familiar as masculine. So it worked for Rice's witch, and I'm sure for other female characters. To me personally, the -rick part makes it manly and the Mer-part makes it sound happy ... it's cheerful-tough like Nicholas or Jack. But, I can also see how people perceive the Mer- part as making it femme, and the -rick adding an "edge" or whatever. *raspberry*So I predict (and have secretly predicted since forever) that if Merrick ever does take off in popularity as a baby name, it'll be as a girl name. At best, it'll do this sort of thing: http://www.behindthename.com/top/name/kelsey,mackenzie,lindsay,aubrey,london
And I'll be exasperated, but I won't think it's as bad as some other names people give to girls.
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It was some recent bestseller, A Spool of Blue Thread. Merrick does sound kind of witchy and "edgy" now that I think about it, but in this book the name was chosen by a kind of Appalachian redneck social climber trying to appear old money blue-bloodish in Baltimore. He named his son Redcliffe.
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Haha, that's funny when considered alongside the Anne Rice character. Hard to believe the author wasn't aware of it, especially since it was a title character.
But now that I think of it, the surnaminess just seems like another reason to think it'll show up on girls in real life. I dunno, it never sounded posh to me as a surname - dog food company, Elephant Man. Guess it might seem that way "back east" since it's the name of a town - so there's probably an old family.

This message was edited 3/15/2015, 10:01 PM

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Merrick and Redcliffe were the last names of (fictional or real life idk) old families on the East Coast in the book. Now I'm kind of ashamed of myself for being attracted to Merrick. I really do have to fight my pretentious instinct pretty hard.
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So move to the west coast? haha. I don't think it's pretentious-seeming here.
Maybe someone disagrees ... dunno. Nobody has called it pretentious in the comments, yet.
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