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Re: Eudora
I like it a lot. I would only use it for a daughter with the intention of calling her Dory, but on someone else Eudora itself is fine. It's not really as stuffy sounding as I think it seems on paper. I heard someone calling a girl of about 9 "Eudora" at the park, last year or the year before. It sounds typical yuppie antique, but a little bit less safely fashionable than names like Matilda or Phineas or Violet ... more along the lines of Olive.I don't make combos much but right now I'm inclined to put it with Lucille. Eudora Lucille. Or maybe Camille.
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Phineas is fashionable?
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Yeah. Isn't it? It's not common, for reasons I think are obvious, but I have the impression that the style of it is still sort of hip. Like Thaddeus. Remember Julia Roberts' twins Phinnaeus and Hazel? Eudora seems to me like it'd have a dowdier image. Although I personally think Hazel and Phineas and Matilda are dowdier than Eudora, I'd expect most people to feel the opposite way. Don't know why.
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I don't pay much attention to movie stars, so I had no idea what children she had. Phineas makes me think of a cartoon my brother likes to watch. It sounds more dorky than fashionable imo.
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