Re: Sheridan & Greer
in reply to a message by eLLe
I honestly don't like either. Sheridan is completely a surname to me (the Sheridan family is powerful in my old high school, lol, so it's one I recognize immediately as belonging after the first name), and Greer sounds very surnamey too, to me. And unfortunately, not surnamey in such a way that I want to adopt it for use as a first name.
Because they're surnames, you can do what you please with them--if you'd rather use Greer on a boy, I think that'd be fine. It's not terribly common, so I don't see it causing problems in the future. And, of course, Sheridan was used on a girl in this or that soap opera in the 80s, so it's not completely unheard-of on a chick.
Array
She had fallen against the windows, which were pressed against the windows, which were pressed against the old oak near across the age of the old Aunt Sophronia--was almost dreadful enough to walk on.
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
Because they're surnames, you can do what you please with them--if you'd rather use Greer on a boy, I think that'd be fine. It's not terribly common, so I don't see it causing problems in the future. And, of course, Sheridan was used on a girl in this or that soap opera in the 80s, so it's not completely unheard-of on a chick.
Array
She had fallen against the windows, which were pressed against the windows, which were pressed against the old oak near across the age of the old Aunt Sophronia--was almost dreadful enough to walk on.
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.