Re: Kimberly
in reply to a message by RDNZL
I'm not a fan of Kimberly at all. I'm actually surprised it's still so popular - it only exited the top 100 in 2013. I mentally lump it with names like Brenda and Angela and Carrie in my mind. 70s names. I hadn't realized it had peaked in the 60s. Or that it had been the #2 name. I guess there's nothing wrong with Kimberly, but it still makes me think of a 1970s/80s cheerleader.
I don't like Kim, and I don't like the "burly" sound. Kimmy is too sickly sweet.
Interestingly, the name Kimber has been rising on the popularity charts. I'm not a fan of that either.
I'd pair Kimberly with a shorter middle name, since it's a longer first name:
Kimberly Alice
Kimberly Hazel
Kimberly June
Kimberly Opal
Kimberly Astrid
I don't like Kim, and I don't like the "burly" sound. Kimmy is too sickly sweet.
Interestingly, the name Kimber has been rising on the popularity charts. I'm not a fan of that either.
I'd pair Kimberly with a shorter middle name, since it's a longer first name:
Kimberly Alice
Kimberly Hazel
Kimberly June
Kimberly Opal
Kimberly Astrid
This message was edited 2/12/2018, 3:41 PM
Replies
Agree with all your points. Kimberly just isn't an attractive name, and I'm surprised it's hung around so long.
Kimberly is, for some reason, used by Spanish speaking parents. You can verify this if you look at the SSA's state data-- its in the top 100 in states with more Spanish speakers (Texas, New Mexico, California) and doesn't chart in most other states.
This message was edited 2/12/2018, 4:36 PM
See, I assumed that as well.
I work at a school with a 90%+ Latino population, so I searched my school's database and we have zero Kimberlys in our 800 students - even the middle and high schools we feed into (over 5000 students between them) have only 6 Kimberlys between them. Maybe it's being used mostly by Mexican immigrants, as opposed to the Puerto Rican and Cuban population of Florida?
I work at a school with a 90%+ Latino population, so I searched my school's database and we have zero Kimberlys in our 800 students - even the middle and high schools we feed into (over 5000 students between them) have only 6 Kimberlys between them. Maybe it's being used mostly by Mexican immigrants, as opposed to the Puerto Rican and Cuban population of Florida?
Spanish usage
That is really interesting! It's not intuitively pronounceable in Spanish at all.
That is really interesting! It's not intuitively pronounceable in Spanish at all.
This message was edited 2/12/2018, 5:30 PM