Edwin
What do you think of Edwin?
I don't really like it.
Hmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
I don't really like it.
Hmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
Replies
I like it a lot.
There's nothing at all wrong with it, but it seems more pretentious, somehow, than Edward (which I like, and which has a similar vibe for me to George: sturdy and cuddly). Edwin feels... fancier. Posher. No idea why it feels that way; possibly because it's much rarer here? My dad had a great-uncle Edwin, and he wasn't fancy at all. But I recall finding out that a pal always known as Ed was actually an Edwin, rather than an Edward, and suddenly getting a quite different impression of him.
This message was edited 12/10/2018, 3:34 PM
I like it less than Edward and but more than Edgar and Edmund - I know three (all adults over 40), one with Edwin as a first name and the others a George Edwin and a Nicholas Edwin.
The Edwin I know with it as a first name has a Welsh surname and I think his parents thought it would sound more mainstream outside Wales than the Welsh name Elwyn.
The Edwin I know with it as a first name has a Welsh surname and I think his parents thought it would sound more mainstream outside Wales than the Welsh name Elwyn.
I really like it!
But I like Edmund even more, so I don't think I'd ever use it myself.
But I like Edmund even more, so I don't think I'd ever use it myself.
It's quite popular here (usually spelled Edvin) and has been for a few years. I've never gotten the appeal of it. I also tend to dislike names that can be pronounced more than one way, and Edvin is one of them here in Sweden. Some people pronounce it with a short E, and some with a long E (same with Edward for example).