Re: Indigo and Yonder
in reply to a message by Array
Indigo is okay if you know the baby is always going to have blue eyes...yonder as a name you have got to be kidding I try and not use english adjectives or adverbs as names
Replies
Well, I do use English words as names--Stardust, Snowdrop, Raining, Snowbird, Silence, Dahlia, Evening, Thursday, etc, are all on my lists.
Why would a name necessarily depend on the colour of my baby's eyes? After all, even if I was sure that my children would have blue eyes (unlikely, as I have brown and my parents had brown and bluish-green--so it's not even certain if I have the allele for blue eyes), she could have pale blue eyes. And in that case, Indigo would be inappropriate--it's a dark colour.
It's fine if you don't like the names--I just find your reasoning bizarre and would be curious to understand where it's coming from.
Array
...And then he said, "You're independent, aren't you?"
"Yes," said Laura.
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
Why would a name necessarily depend on the colour of my baby's eyes? After all, even if I was sure that my children would have blue eyes (unlikely, as I have brown and my parents had brown and bluish-green--so it's not even certain if I have the allele for blue eyes), she could have pale blue eyes. And in that case, Indigo would be inappropriate--it's a dark colour.
It's fine if you don't like the names--I just find your reasoning bizarre and would be curious to understand where it's coming from.
Array
...And then he said, "You're independent, aren't you?"
"Yes," said Laura.
A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
I just don't see it fitting very many children...many children are named wild names like tempest and if they are meek it makes for some uncomfortable moments