View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Dara and Cara
I suppose the -a ending led to the gender-bend. I expect a male Irishman, probably with a -gh at the end. Of the name, not necessarily of the Irishman. Ahem.In which case it'd be DARRa. Short a. Cara would be like car with an -a. Never heard it sounding like care, and it was well used where I live at one time. I'd pronounce Kara the same.I prefer the C spelling, but I find them both rather flimsy and very dated.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I'm pretty sure that when Dara was being used for girls in the 1970s US, relatively few people here were even aware that there existed an Irish male name Dara. I don't think the two usages are related. They could be, but it seems unlikely to me.
vote up1
Coincidences do happen - Dana (DAHna) is frequently used in South Africa as a nn for Daniel, for instance. I knew a Derryn (f) who was a 70s baby, but that's as close as it gets. Was there perhaps a celeb or media stimulus leading to the fem use of Dara back then, do you know? Or even a simple wish to find a name close to but not identical with Cara?
vote up1
The only thing I can find is, there was a character in a popular fantasy series that was written beginning in 1970 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chronicles_of_Amber_charactersMaybe the character name contributed to exposure and made it seem more usable to people. But IMO, usually, pop character-names suit fashions that are already in the process of becoming. Daryl was being used as a feminine name occasionally (actress Daryl Hannah was born 1960), as was Dale - and Dara sounds a lot like Tara (both usually had the AIR sound in the US) too. A bunch of "Dare" names were in fashion during the same period: http://www.behindthename.com/top/name/dara,daryl,darren,darrell,darryl
vote up1