View Message

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

Re: Tired (m)
in reply to a message by Janan
It seems like the use (or overuse) of Chloe is regional. I have never met a single Chloe in real life (born '91) - none of my classmates had the name, none had sisters with the name... This is why it has never seemed "tired" to me, personally.I will say, though, that my step-siblings grew up in the county west of me, where the suburbs start to sprawl a little more and... well, I'll just come out and say it: the population is significantly whiter. And there were five Chloes in my stepsister's class in the yearbook. (This same thing happened with Courtney: never personally went to school with a single one, but in the next county over there were Courtneys galore.)***Please rate my personal name lists:www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/117507
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/109399
hwww.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/132018
http://greens-end.myminicity.com/
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Agreed. I have met one Chloe in my life (1990 baby) and it was the English name chosen by a Chinese student I had in China. So it still feels fresh to me. I love the meaning, "green shoots" it makes me think of springtime.
vote up1
Agreed. I have met one Chloe in my life (1990 baby) and it was the English name chosen by a Chinese student I had in China. So it still feels fresh to me. I love the meaning, "green shoots" it makes me think of springtime.
vote up1
Agreed. I have met one Chloe in my life (1990 baby) and it was the English name chosen by a Chinese student I had in China. So it still feels fresh to me. I love the meaning, "green shoots" it makes me think of springtime.
vote up1
The regional thing makes sense.In England and Wales (where I am!) it was the number one name for girls for six years running!
vote up1