Re: More word names
in reply to a message by Anneza
Takesure? That doesn't make very much sense as a word/pphrase name. It kinda sounds like some kind of vitamin or supplement.
Shepherd and its variants aren't unheard-of here in the US. There's a well-known newscaster named Shepherd Smith, for instance, though I forget if that's how he spells it.
Wonder if Welldone has a brother named Mediumrare.
Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, when you criticize him, you're a mile away and you have his shoes!
Steve Martin
Shepherd and its variants aren't unheard-of here in the US. There's a well-known newscaster named Shepherd Smith, for instance, though I forget if that's how he spells it.
Wonder if Welldone has a brother named Mediumrare.
Before you criticize a man, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, when you criticize him, you're a mile away and you have his shoes!
Steve Martin
Replies
Yes, in the USA Shepherd would normally be considered a given name created from a surname rather than being directly a "word name." I've known one man with this name personally and know of several others.
This message was edited 10/10/2024, 8:46 AM
In South Africa it is more likely that - oh dear, I've got to use the correct terms but it doesn't please me - white South Africans would be familiar with typically European/Anglophone surnames like Taylor, Cameron etc, which can serve as given names, whereas black South Africans would associate a word like Shepherd with Christianity. So RB Constance is right to think of Puritan names. Same principle.
It's not just South Africans. I've know people from Nigeria and Kenya, and I think Ghana, with these types of names.
Zimbabwe is the best. For a while, several years ago, there was a government spokesperson, male I think, whose name was Psychologies. And I once attended a university graduation ceremony at which a Zimbabwean student proudly received his degree: his name was Furniture.
This message was edited 10/10/2024, 11:57 PM