Ace, Spike, Thorn
Hi !!!
Ace
Spike
Thorn
WDYTO these names?
Do you personally know someone name this?
Can you rate & comment them, please?
Personal Name Lists https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/125456
Ace
Spike
Thorn
WDYTO these names?
Do you personally know someone name this?
Can you rate & comment them, please?
Personal Name Lists https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/125456
Replies
I hate the name Ace, Asa or similar and don't even have a good reason to i just dont.
Spike would be what a cool dad nicknames his kid and I love it, I wouldn't go as a full name tho maybe as a nn for Spencer, Spiro or Mike as many others have said.
Thorn is alright but just doesn't sound or look that good imo
Spike would be what a cool dad nicknames his kid and I love it, I wouldn't go as a full name tho maybe as a nn for Spencer, Spiro or Mike as many others have said.
Thorn is alright but just doesn't sound or look that good imo
11 year old me would be all for this. I was super into "Dusk" which I believe falls into the category.
I'm familiar with Spike as a rhyming nickname (with Mike) for Michael; I don't currently know one but I might have once.
Thorn is awful, but in Afrikaans the word for a thorn is used as a term of praise: Jou doring! Like: You're a star! In theory it could be used as a nn, but I've never heard it like that.
Ace ... also in Afrikaans, and Dutch, there is a surname - Uys - which sounds so close to Ace that English-speaking people can cope with it. And a very prominent playwright, satirical comedian, drag act, named Pieter-Dirk Uys went to the UK as a young man (60s probably) and found that he pretty much had to introduce himself as Ace rather than spend time trying to teach people to do something they really weren't going to get right anyway. When he came home, he dropped it. And that's my only association.
Thorn is awful, but in Afrikaans the word for a thorn is used as a term of praise: Jou doring! Like: You're a star! In theory it could be used as a nn, but I've never heard it like that.
Ace ... also in Afrikaans, and Dutch, there is a surname - Uys - which sounds so close to Ace that English-speaking people can cope with it. And a very prominent playwright, satirical comedian, drag act, named Pieter-Dirk Uys went to the UK as a young man (60s probably) and found that he pretty much had to introduce himself as Ace rather than spend time trying to teach people to do something they really weren't going to get right anyway. When he came home, he dropped it. And that's my only association.
all terrible