View Message

Tiggy
Hi !!!WDYTO Tiggy as full name?I came across it when I read "The Seven Sisters" saga by Lucinda Riley.There Tiggy was the short of Taygete (one of the Pleiades) but I read that it could be diminutive of Antigone, Tegan, Charlotte or even Alexandra.I think that it's cute as full name! It's youthful but sweet.Personal Name Lists https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/125456
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I don't think it works as a full name. While it'd make a good nickname for Antigone, it sounds childish, and Tiggy is too close to Twiggy in my opinion.
vote up1
Tiggy is the name of a children's game where one person is "it" and runs around trying to touch another child to make them "it". Add to that Tigger, the A A Milne character. Then there's Twiggy the 60s teen model.
I get the mental picture of skinny children bouncing around trying to thump each other.

This message was edited 6/3/2019, 6:31 PM

vote up1
It sounds like baby talk. It sounds like what you would call a cat named Tigger.
vote up1
Uh definitely no.It might seem 'youthful and sweet' but not a serious enough name as an adult. If it was my name i'd be embarrassed.Cute nickname, yes
vote up1
I don't see how it ties in with Charlotte or Alexandra at all. It just sounds like baby talk to me, like Boo-Boo or Shugs.
vote up1
I only like it as a nickname for Antigone or maybe Terpsichore.
vote up1
Tig, Tigs, or Tiggy would make cute nicknames for a baby Antigone, but they would sound silly on an adult. Don't Italians use any cute nicknames for babies and little children that they don't use once the person grows up? Mimma and Tesoro sound like they could be regular names to non-Italian ears, but aren't they generally strictly nicknames?
vote up1
Hi !!!Italians don't use nicknames at all except for those well-known like Mina, Nino, Dina, Pino, Beppe, Gina, Rosy (f) or Giusy (f).The fact was simply that I supposed that Tiggy were like all the others -y nicknames that recently are becoming established names...just it.Thanks for your explaination.
vote up1
It’s a little too childish - cute on a small girl, maybe, but pretty ridiculous on an adult. I know it isn’t so different to a nickname like Libby: it just somehow sounds and feels younger and sillier.
I knew a set of siblings called Harry, Lulu, and Tiggy - I think everyone at our school felt they had pretty ridiculous names (Harry’s fine on its own, but lumped in with Lulu and Tiggy takes on its own childish sound too)
vote up1
Okay, now we’re just being ridiculous. Although I admit that as a nn for Antigone it made me smile.
vote up1
Why should Tiggy be ridicolous?Is it not the same of Tilly, Cindy or Libby?Does an English speaker has a particular association with any negative word or famous bearer?

This message was edited 6/3/2019, 11:45 AM

vote up1
Tiggy sounds like a childish nickname or something cutsy people call their spouses in private. It would be really cute on a baby Antigone. Tilly is not used as a full name by Americans and, until very recently, neither was Poppy.

This message was edited 6/3/2019, 12:21 PM

vote up1
QuoteTilly is not used as a full name by Americans
Tilly's getting enough use by Americans that I wouldn't be surprised if it charted in the next ~5 years.
https://www.behindthename.com/top/beyond.php?name=Tilly&gender=&type=sample
vote up1
I can stomach Tiggy as a diminutive of Antigone. I don't know what's up with the other options.But as a full name? Just absurd.
vote up1
Why should Tiggy be absurd?
Is it not the same of Tilly, Cindy or Libby?Does an English speaker has a particular association with any negative word or famous bearer?

This message was edited 6/3/2019, 11:46 AM

vote up1
Well, I don't like any of those as full given names, either. But Tiggy is especially nicknamey, cutesy, and juvenile. It doesn't stand alone at all, in my opinion. It feels very silly.
vote up1