Boy names?

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It's just that we know so little otherwise. We can't ask "what's his favourite colour? What sport's team is he cheering for etc. We don't even know his name.


On a more serious note the weight gives some indication of his robustness.
 
W odin shoes as soles made from trees of logic?

Couldn't be in a religiously instituted state requiring no alterations of nothing but the word ... as the common folk begin to read into it as a great league ... that'd be a measure of that which is subtle ... or eternal redaction?
 
Do rafted soles allow floating bundles to carry multitudes out of undesirous situations that you can't imagine ...?

That's life ... a pain ... sometimes called the function of learning ...
 
Jud-as an ancient name of power to learn? When listening to the fathers of religion this is knowledge we are jue'doubt of as the religious powers insisted that the common people shouldn't know what the religious powers are extracting ...

Do you know of powerful church investments that are in short ... not non-prophet organizations because they don't know the ancient de light of Eros of Sharin'? They still will claim non-profit status as parts of the church ... big business would like to end that as they would like to reap the benefits ... due to avarice as they don't know when enough is enough due to the belief in not knowing nothing ... and thus an expansive passion is unknown to them as the Shadow character of a fading conscience ... in metaphorical state as paradox ... where tail Sar entangled ... "Bo" or chaos theology?

Then Ju' Sar big n learning ... but you haven't come to that desire yet ... as phi lo' Sophie ... hard learning in the present state of religion of not knowing ...

How many times have you heard: "It's beta if you don't know ... especially in sects"? Is this isolated in the present collective ...?

One has to bear with sentience ...
 
Congratulations on your new son

Personnally like classic names, michael, robert, but also like Jude.
I too like the classic names, lastpointe. Our youngestson was given 3 Irish names. I wish that I hadn't put the most common one first; however, it suits him.
 
Congratulations on your new son

Personnally like classic names, michael, robert, but also like Jude.

My wife's problem with names like that is that they can become too common and therefore rather bland. For instance, David (as mentioned, my RL name) was so common in my generation that I had at least 2 other Davids in every class in school. Even here at work, I have a Dave working for me (he prefers Dave and I prefer David so that avoids confusion) and another manages one of our offices. In my son's generation, we are seeing the same thing with Justin, Ashley, and some others.
 
David has been a problem for a long time. I dated so many Dave's in high school that my mother called every date of mine she met "Dave" for years. Fortunately, perhaps, that's the name I ended up with for a long-term partner.
 
My given name was very common when I was growing up. It is also common in my age bracket now, of course, but many women with my name use its long form. I tried the long form for a while when I was new in a job but it didn't feel right to me.
 
My maiden name is an Irish one which can be tricky (even for me) to pronounce. My married name has proven to be much easier to live with.

But I digress. Congratulations on the new arrival, @chansen
 
David has been a problem for a long time. I dated so many Dave's in high school that my mother called every date of mine she met "Dave" for years. Fortunately, perhaps, that's the name I ended up with for a long-term partner.

I knew a family where three sisters were each married to Bob. What was interesting was that they were Bob A, Bob B, and Bob C -
Bob Abbott, Bob Brown, and Bob Croft.

All these Bobs are probably in their 70s now.

I had a fairly popular name (it still is). There was always someone else in my class with that name and I was the one that got the nickname (to this day I can't stand that nickname for myself although I don't mind it for other people if they don't mind it.
 
Congratulations @chansen I'm looking forward to learning his name.....in good time. You do need to get to know him first of course.
 
My maiden name is an Irish one which can be tricky (even for me) to pronounce. My married name has proven to be much easier to live with.


Back when we got hitched, I encouraged Mrs. M to follow Chinese tradition and keep her family surname rather than taking mine. However, she thought my surname, being nominally English (it's actually Welsh) would be easier for people to say/spell (her Chinese name is easy to say but the Pinyin transliteration causes confusion for English speakers). Alas, my name, as I warned her, has a long history of being mangled in various ways by English speaking folks. :D
 
How is little No Name this morning? Hoping he is an 'easy' baby rather than a colicky one! For what it is worth, I prefer the names that have been used for many years. Michael, David, Richard, Graham, Peter, Paul, Alan, Barry, etc. My grands tell me that they don't have any kids in their schools with these names.
 
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