Trendy
in reply to a message by DLB
I know three under ten. It's also nms.
The moral of Pete's story is: No matter what you step in, keep walking along and singing your song... because it's all good.
Replies
Interesting. Are they all in your area? Perhaps there's a regional popularity. I meet a lot of children, and I've never met a Clive before!
Yes.
Two are friends of friends, one is a child I just met at the library.
Two are friends of friends, one is a child I just met at the library.
*sons of friends.
I did the math and you know .579% of all the Clives born in the last 10 years.
Which is roughly the equivalent of knowing all the Andrews born in 2013. Andrew was #22 that year; there were 11622 of them.
Which is roughly the equivalent of knowing all the Andrews born in 2013. Andrew was #22 that year; there were 11622 of them.
LOL
That's hilarious.
That's hilarious.
I agree.
Clive is more of a dated name than a trendy one. I've noticed a lot of older British men are named Clive. (Clive seems to have been more common in the UK than the US. Frasier even had a joke about the Britishness of the name Clive in one episode. Clive only appeared on the US charts nine times - 1885, 1892, 1895, 1897, 1899, 1906, 1930, 1931, and 1935.)
Clive is more of a dated name than a trendy one. I've noticed a lot of older British men are named Clive. (Clive seems to have been more common in the UK than the US. Frasier even had a joke about the Britishness of the name Clive in one episode. Clive only appeared on the US charts nine times - 1885, 1892, 1895, 1897, 1899, 1906, 1930, 1931, and 1935.)
This message was edited 3/12/2016, 8:21 AM
That's weird. Clive has not even been in the top 1000 names (at least in the US) since 1935.
This message was edited 3/11/2016, 7:38 PM