View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Angel
in reply to a message by Lily
Perhaps you are asking for a hellraiser. Angel Clare was no angel, right? More seriously, it's probably because I mostly see Angel on a boy as a Spanish name and Angel on a girl as an English name, and it affects my perception of each, just as I would view Jesús (he-SOOS) and Jesus (JEE-zus) very differently. On girls, I sometimes feel like Angel is a very high pressure name, à la Chastity, holding a girl against an impossibly high standard of goodness, sweetness, and purity. It seems like too much--like a a set up for a long hard fall--to me, and that worries me enough that I'm reluctant to use Angeline, my great-great-great grandmother's name...even though she was a neat lady and I love her name. It surprises me that you know many young Angies. I don't know any under age 25 or so, just as I don't know any young Angelas, and I would describe Angie as an unfashionable nickname, like Mindy or Sue. I mostly run into little Angelinas these days, sometimes called Angel, but most often called Angelina or Lina.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Ahhh I see. Yes, Jesus and Jesús are very different names to me as well. I agree that it's a high pressure name but I think it is for boys, too. Oh but Angeline is really lovely and so much prettier that Angelina. It would also make a nice middle name. I actually don't know many Angies I just guessed that Angie would be more common as a nickname than Angel. I guess I just figured people who want to call their child Angel would just name her Angel instead of Angelina. I guess I was wrong :P
vote up1