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Re: Fiona
Fiona is my name. I have been raised in the Pacific Northwest, and was named after Fiona Ritchie of Thistle & Shamrock.I am now 26, and I will say my feelings towards my name were negatively affected by Shrek when it came out when I was a child. Comments were never too bad, but kind of annoying. I now have released most of the irritation with it, but I still would prefer that they had chosen another name. :) She is a fine character to have an association with, though.I have grown to love the sounds of my name, and appreciate the (for my generation) uncommon and somewhat reviled first letter F. I now think of fae/fairies, ferry boats, forests, flowers, fountains, and felines... not just F grades and expletives. I like that the initial seems to be coming back in style. The syllables in Fiona sound beautiful and musical to me, just as they always did to my mom.I am part Irish and Scottish, and appreciate the link to both countries the name provides (even if it is a modern/romanized name — I still consider it legitimate). Generally I receive compliments on it, sometimes profuse ones.In my city, there are now many many little Fionas. There weren’t when I was a kid. I really enjoy meeting others with my name.

This message was edited 1/20/2019, 5:42 PM

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My dh used to listen to that program all the time, lol.
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Nice to see you've returned.Isn't it always fun to meet others with our (same) name? For the last occasion I met a Barbara, she stated that her name is Barbara Ann - and that she likes her (middle) name better. She appeared to be Asian - I found myself enthused at this seeming attribute.

This message was edited 1/20/2019, 5:43 PM

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Thank you! I imagine I will pop in and out with no regularity for quite some time. Goes with my mood. :)Yes it certainly is!I have grown very fond of Barbara over the past few years. I have known so many wonderful Barbaras, and the sound and meaning are delightful. I love the ancient feeling of it, too.
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