I named my daughter Major, she was born pre 2015. Major suits her, she is Major in every way, a total badass. She plays coed ice hockey, lacrosse and is a competitive equestrian hunter/jumper. Fearless, strong, kind, creative, caring, smart, driven and competitive. Not everyone can carry the name well, especially people who actually care about or think what others will say about their name. My son’s name is Magnus. How’s that for doubling down? Choose wisely my friends. Only you know what’s right for you and your family. I feel bad for people who live their life based on how other people think.
― Anonymous User 2/6/2023
-2
My friend named her son Major. It sounds ignorant to be honest, boy or girl. All I can think of is the 90s movie Major Payne. Not to mention in life they could be called “Major…” anything from good to bad. Just dumb. People need to seriously think before they just blurt random words to name their children.
All the people barking about how this is a hypermasculine name that will never be mistaken for a girl's makes me want to name a little girl Major. It'd be a fun name for a girl even without the spite honestly.
Ugh, reminds me of that reporter Major Garrett. Besides that, Major is a dumb (yet also pompous-sounding) name that is better suited for a dog than a human. A definite "hell no" category name for anybody with a bit of sense.
― Anonymous User 6/21/2020
4
Major is Latin, meaning greater. About 30 years ago I gave much thought to naming my son Major. His middle name would have been Thomas. I settled on another name for him. A name I found to be a worthy choice as well. He likes his name and has stated he likes Major Thomas too and my take on the reference to the song, Space Oddity by David Bowie.
As someone with the first name of Major I hope it never catches on or becomes too popular. I love that it's my name and it fits me very well. As far as teasing went I was called Minor a lot but it was balanced with my last name. In my case it was the anglicized version of Magnus/Mahgnus, a name my grandmother's Danish family used before immigrating to the United States. It's a great name, but please use it sparingly.
Hyper-masculine names are becoming a necessity as people are assigning traditional boy names to girls. If you go with "Michael, James, Andy, etc," then chances are your little boy will wind up with a female classmate of the same name. Unfortunately, in that situation, the girl is not ridiculed for having a boy name. Instead the boy is laughed at for having a girl name. Trust me on this, as a "Tyler" growing up in the 80's, I was constantly called Mary Tyler Moore. As parents move away from the traditional boy names, the girl names will follow. All of the "Braxtons, Brodies, Bradys, etc" that dominate the male name landscape of today will soon become the female names of the future. If none of that bothers you then don't worry about naming around the trends. However, if you want a lock down name that will never cross over the gender line, then Major works great. I have a 2 year old named Anderson Major. We were set on calling him Anderson until about 2 weeks before his due date when we met a little girl named, you guessed it, Anderson. In hindsight, with his personality, he was born to be Major. I'm not sure how it would work out if you have quiet, shy, passive little boys, but for our little boy, Major is the only name that fits.
I don't care if this is your maiden name, if you are in the military or whatever- I find this name ridiculous as a first name. If you have a reason to use it, use it as a middle.
Major is my 2 year old's name. I chose it because it is a strong, gender specific name, which hopefully will never see the top 100 list. It fits him well.