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Very strange names for children

(233 Posts)
Katek Sun 05-Jun-16 15:36:24

I've just seen that a couple in Australia have named their new daughter Kviiilyn as they don't like the traditional spelling of Caitlin. What have they condemned that poor child to? Guarantee that most people will call her K-vill-yn. The parents think that this spelling makes her unique!

MiniMouse Sun 05-Jun-16 15:56:37

That means that you can be KVIIIk or K8k wink grin

Katek Sun 05-Jun-16 16:10:27

Oooh! So I can! Never thought of that......blame my Sunday lunch!

ninathenana Sun 05-Jun-16 17:39:59

So it's pronounced Caitlin ?
Who would know. Ridiculous!

LullyDully Sun 05-Jun-16 17:51:35

Silly.. like a.word.puzzle. Margaret would be MR gr8 I suppose.

tanith Sun 05-Jun-16 17:51:39

What an odd choice of spelling, mind I've tried to find out where my Aunt's name came from and haven't managed to find out apart from its Welsh, she was called Gwlythyn as was my eldest sister. Always pronounced Gly thyn, I had a terrible time when my Aunt was in a nursing home with Alzheimers they would insist on calling her Gwill no wonder she was confused.
If anyone else has heard of it or can find a meaning I'd love to hear it.

thatbags Sun 05-Jun-16 18:06:38

When I was a student I used to babysit regularly for a mum called Gennifer-with-a-G. She always said it like that when telling her name, otherwise people would spell it with a J. Her first child was called Kate but people joked that it was Kate-with-a-Qu. It was quite a posh family. Nice people though and they always fed me well and gave me a room in their house overnight cos they were a bit out from Dundee.

Thingmajig Sun 05-Jun-16 19:06:08

I remember getting a list of names sent to me when DGD was expected and they had an unrecognisable name amongst them. Turned out it was a Gaelic spelling of Katie ... it wasn't my favourite name but I did say they would be better with plain Katie (or maybe K80???) to give us all a chance if that was the chosen name!

Happily another name was chosen. smile

Deedaa Sun 05-Jun-16 21:11:55

There was a lovely Lady in Cornwall (As in titled Lady but I can't remember her full title) who always introduced herself as "Jonet the spelling mistake" because her father had been sent to register her birth and didn't notice that Janet had been spelled wrong.

Nelliemoser Sun 05-Jun-16 22:01:11

Regarding names, the teachers and social workers on here will find few surprises at the bizzare names some people give their children. Particularly unusual spellings. There was trend for initials such as DB JD PJ etc.

NoStrayGrey Sun 05-Jun-16 22:13:02

I have the misfortune of being given an 'unusual' name. I've always hated it, and in fact, it made me a very, very shy child, with no self-confidence, because I was so self-conscious. Parents that do this to their children really do need a lesson in walking in the shoes of someone 'unusual', then maybe, a proper name would be given to their little darlin' instead of something ridiculous, like mine!

Rosina Sun 05-Jun-16 22:40:21

I remember when a school friend referred to her 'Aunt Girl'. We were all intrigued; but evidently she was the last child of an enormous family and the parents had run out of ideas!

Katek Sun 05-Jun-16 22:54:22

I know a real life Sky whose daughter is called Rainbow. She shortened it to Rain when she went to university. There is also a child In one of our coastal villages called Prayer.........

fiorentina51 Sun 05-Jun-16 23:04:32

I once taught a little girl blessed with the middle name 'Aitch'. Apparently she was born in a year when the car registration letter was an 'H'. ?

BBbevan Mon 06-Jun-16 05:16:43

We had a KC and an SX at school ( born in Essex apparently) . Just imagine what She will suffer when a bit older !

MaizieD Mon 06-Jun-16 07:34:05

We had a child at the school I worked at with what I thought was the stupidest name spelling ever but the OP's beats it hollow!

It's not really a 'spelling' at all, though, is it? A 'spelling' surely means that the sounds within the word are spelled according to the conventions of a language's orthographic system. You can't make up a completely new system on a whim; no-one else would be ab!e to read what you write!
Poor child.

Marmark1 Mon 06-Jun-16 07:50:35

Stupid woman.

LullyDully Mon 06-Jun-16 08:04:48

We had a Paige Read and a
Jade Green.

BBbevan Mon 06-Jun-16 08:55:45

My Dad always said he had a Dwayne Pipe !!

chocolatepudding Mon 06-Jun-16 09:14:34

OK guess the name. I have an unusual name beginning with H. Very few people get it right and so I tend to reply to anything - Helen, Hilary, Hannah, Heather, Helena, Helga, Holly, Harriet, Heidi

When it matters i will make sure my name is spelt correctly and said. Most of the time I just don't worry about it.

Daddima Mon 06-Jun-16 09:36:11

I did hear of a child called La-a ( pronounced Ladasha, apparently)
Not sure I believe it, though.

goose1964 Mon 06-Jun-16 09:51:07

my middle son is Dafydd ( the welsh for David) we have had so much fun since we moved to England with people both trying to spell & pronounce it, so much so he now calls himself Daf ( pronounced Dav).

nanasam Mon 06-Jun-16 09:52:01

My daughter works in the local maternity unit and hears some crackers. Her favourite was a little girl called Germolene!

Spindrift Mon 06-Jun-16 09:53:11

I can remember a child staying at my mum's (she used to keep summer visitors) the little girl was called Happy Harry, because her father was on a ship called that when she was born

Katek Mon 06-Jun-16 09:58:15

chocolate pudding - Hermione? Halcyone? Hepzibah?