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Amos or Hugh?
Which do you prefer?Sparrow
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AmosI think Amos is really cool and could see it on a child today despite how old it is. Hugh is definitely old man though, I don’t see why you would use it when there is the beautiful Hugo.
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I wouldn’t consider Hugo beautiful. It sounds like one of the non-inadvertently pretentious characters the young March sisters would have acted out in their attic.
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Hugh
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Amos because it feels more substantial.
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Amos.I'm not crazy about it, but Hugh just sounds weird, to me. I never liked it.
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Amos definitely, I love that name. And while people are saying it means burden, the name Amos actually derives from the Hebrew verb עמס (‘amas) meaning to carry. So to elaborate it means to load or carry a load.
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I don't like the sound of Amos, and it's what I think of as a fringe-biblical name, probably most used by people who read their Bibles with focused intensity. So I'd never consider considering it.I like Hugh a lot. Good vibrations - intelligent, thoughtful, diligent.Trouble is, in South Africa (some) Afrikaans-speaking people (sometimes) have great difficulty with the letter H. They often insert it where it doesn't belong, like pihano instead of piano, and/or they can't hear it when it is present. I had a colleague once named Hugh who was a notorious gossip; I mentioned something to an Afrikaans colleague once, and she was startled and asked me how I knew. I said "Hugh told me" and she looked even more astonished and said "No, I didn't!". Her English was very good, close to mother-tongue proficiency, but it let her down at that point. Hugo doesn't seem to have the same effect, for some reason, but I prefer Hugh.
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AmosI love how Hugh looks, but I always feel dissatisfied when I say it out loud.
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This is how I feel about the name. I feel like all I'm saying is "Ew"
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HughI don’t like Amos, but loves Hugh so that was an easy pick.
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Neither, they are both really aristocratic-old-guyish.Hugh just sounds like someone being surprised. "You won the lottery" - "Hugh?" It doesn't even sound like a name. And it is very Hugh Grant which is fine but also reminds me of old, posh men.I choose Amos because I like Harry Potter and it sounds like a name at least.
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I don't know about aristocratic......My grandpa was named Hugh, he was the most rugged, hard-working, down-to-earth farmer boy ever. Maybe he was an anomaly..?
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I just looked up Amos' meaning and it is terrible :( I thought it meant "beloved" like Amy or Amanda but I was wrong
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Actually...The name Amos derives from the Hebrew verb עמס (‘amas) to carry. So to elaborate it means to load or carry a load.

This message was edited 10/28/2020, 3:37 PM

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Well that makes all the difference xD perhaps the Amos entry should be modified if so?
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"load, burden" D: awe poor kiddies named Amos. Was this the Hebrew version of "Unwanted"?

This message was edited 10/28/2020, 2:35 PM

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HughAmos is too biblical old man.
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Amos. Hugh sounds dated.
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I think both sound dated, but Amos is better imo
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