David vs Alden
Greetings! Interested to hear opinions about which name you like better and why. David or Alden? Much appreciated!
Replies
I love the name David. I'd prefer Aiden over Alden.
Alden! David, while handsome, is too bland for my liking.
I would choose David; it is classy and strong (even though, I have a very negative association...irl I could never use the name).
I've known two Davids and nether one has positive memories for me so I'll choose Alden. It's a name you don't hear very much and I like the way it sounds.
ALden, or ALLden? Too complicated. David is excellent, a timeless classic. My birth surname is Davies, I realised I was pregnant when my first child kicked me during a David Attenborough TV programme, and so my son's first mn is David. For a short while, when he was about 5, we went on holiday and he told his new friends that his name was David (instead of Peter). This didn't last, but I was glad he enjoyed his mn as well.
I like them about the same, but Alden would feel more like it's my style (for some reason my family just doesn't really do Biblical/Hebrew-origin names) so for a son of my own I'd lean Alden.
I might (!?) rather see my kid date a David than an Alden though, lol.
David has avid in it (I'm weird, I notice these things, but the name seems slightly ... avid to me, like a driven ambitious person - that could be good or bad or neutral), and seems traditional and smart. I think nickname Dave is nice - generic these days, which I'm neutral about, and friendlier than David.
Alden sounds more modern preppyish, like the kind of name that basically traditional parents give a first child when they are really excited and feel like traditional names might be boring. I don't love surnames as firstnames - they seem sort of aspirational, like want-to-sound as if they have the surname in their family, esp when it's an English surname - but Alden doesn't come off totally surnamey.
I met an Alden once, my son's age (now teenaged). His little brother was named Charles (Charlie). They didn't call him Al, but it's a potential thing that could happen - I dunno, it might actually be cool.
If I were wrangling between David and Alden, I'd consider Dean instead of either.
I might (!?) rather see my kid date a David than an Alden though, lol.
David has avid in it (I'm weird, I notice these things, but the name seems slightly ... avid to me, like a driven ambitious person - that could be good or bad or neutral), and seems traditional and smart. I think nickname Dave is nice - generic these days, which I'm neutral about, and friendlier than David.
Alden sounds more modern preppyish, like the kind of name that basically traditional parents give a first child when they are really excited and feel like traditional names might be boring. I don't love surnames as firstnames - they seem sort of aspirational, like want-to-sound as if they have the surname in their family, esp when it's an English surname - but Alden doesn't come off totally surnamey.
I met an Alden once, my son's age (now teenaged). His little brother was named Charles (Charlie). They didn't call him Al, but it's a potential thing that could happen - I dunno, it might actually be cool.
If I were wrangling between David and Alden, I'd consider Dean instead of either.
This message was edited 4/18/2024, 9:41 PM
Good point, I don't hate Dave or anything but it's very much a name for Some Guy and not something I'd want for my son lol. And I've never met a David who was able to go by David, everyone hears David and automatically starts calling them Dave. Maybe it's different now though-- I know my generation switched James from "automatically Jim" to "usually called James" so maybe the same thing happened or will happen to David.