Daisy
I like Daisy, and I think it's sweet. What about you?
You can hate it if you want, it's all good. :)
Hmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
You can hate it if you want, it's all good. :)
Hmm. Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
Replies
It's kind of a dog's name..
It’s very sweet, but I know so many dogs named Daisy (at least four) that I find it hard to see it on a child.
This message was edited 12/4/2019, 2:10 PM
When my friend Desiree went to preschool, one of the aides mistakenly called her Daisy-Ray, and to this day I call her Daisy sometimes. I like it a lot, and it's a whole lot better than Desiree; most people call her Des. Daisy is sweet, friendly and cheerful; plus, daisies were Chaucer's favourite flowers! That's quite a recommendation.
Combos ... for family reasons, I might have considered using names starting with D and H, and I got Daisy immediately, and Harriet, but I can't settle on the order. Daisy Harriet? Harriet Daisy? I'm baffled.
Combos ... for family reasons, I might have considered using names starting with D and H, and I got Daisy immediately, and Harriet, but I can't settle on the order. Daisy Harriet? Harriet Daisy? I'm baffled.
I want to love it. My grandmother was Dasie. But it is just thesugars, sweetest, least adult sounding name in the world and I just don't like it. It's like Lucy on steroids.
Daisy is a nice name. Nothing I'd choose, but its nice
I love it. I think it's sweet but not sickly sweet. I can easily see it on both a child and an adult.
I think it’s cheerful. I like field daisies.
It's a bit childish, but inoffensive.
sorry only maybe as a nn - too cutesy