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Very strange names for children

(234 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!

Elrel Tue 07-Jun-16 12:47:40

Choc pud - Honor?

Crafting Tue 07-Jun-16 13:18:12

Ooh ooh, I'm close. Now I'm getting more excited. What on earth can it be. Which post is closest chocolatep the first or second? Come on give us a clue grin

Mumsyface Tue 07-Jun-16 13:32:51

I had a student named Viajra and although I tried extremely hard not to call her vagina I think I might have accidentally said something like viagra........there were constant giggles and sniggers, and it was an adult class too! blush

Elrel Tue 07-Jun-16 13:43:03

I asked a small Chinese boy's mother how I should pronounce his name Xexey (may be misspelt). She looked me calmly in the eye and replied firmly, 'In England, he is Gary.' Lovely family, wise too!

BBbevan Tue 07-Jun-16 13:47:16

Helvetica ?

Elrel Tue 07-Jun-16 13:48:25

Katek - I just keep looking at OP and thinking Kivvylin! It's just a bit too clever.
DD was at school with a Trai-Ci and a neighbour called her baby Emme-Leigh with an umlaut on the second e 'to be different'. I wonder whether over the years she has become Emily!
Where's an umlaut when you need one.

dramatictessa Tue 07-Jun-16 14:00:09

Okay, chocolate, how many letters, vowels, consonants? What does it rhyme with? Is it a recognisable name or a made up one? Give us a chance grin

Maggie725 Tue 07-Jun-16 14:40:36

Hi. 1 lady has said that some competition winners names etc are on Facebook. I'm not surprised.
When are you going to delete some of the input in the whole of Gransnet?
Including online.
?????

Crafting Tue 07-Jun-16 15:16:58

confused

Maggiemaybe Tue 07-Jun-16 15:23:38

Who are you talking to/about, Maggie725?

dramatictessa Tue 07-Jun-16 15:26:55

Um. Is it me, or has this thread got very odd?

Crafting Tue 07-Jun-16 15:36:55

I think perhaps Maggie has posted on the wrong thread.

Back to the business in hand. Come on chocolatep we really want to know. Give us some more clues please.

grandMattie Tue 07-Jun-16 17:16:31

Just remembered. I worked in a Bank, and one cashier came hurtling out of her "cage" [as it was in the old days], barely able to speak, she was laughing so much. The customer's name [to be fair, she was Icelandic ] was "Randy Bang".... grin

starlily106 Tue 07-Jun-16 18:15:14

I read on Internet about a young girl who had just given birth to a baby girl, and when the nurse asked what her name was going to be the girl said what sounded like ash .hole .ee . The nurse asked her how it was spelt, and the young mum said asshole.

anne53 Wed 08-Jun-16 08:01:15

I taught a Blue Black and a Red Fox!

etheltbags1 Wed 08-Jun-16 10:23:03

what is an 'umlaut', even DD who is a MA in literature doesn't know.?

Bellanonna Wed 08-Jun-16 10:52:25

Theyre dots over an a, o or u to alter the pronunciation of some German words. Sorry, can't reproduce examples here. You get it on Moët (ooh it did it automatically) of Moët and Chandon fame

etheltbags1 Wed 08-Jun-16 11:12:45

I get the idea but how do you pronounce Moet, I always thought it was said as its spelt mo-et. But the little thingys above must mean its said differently confused, I only got as far as A levels and we certainly didn't do those thingys then 1970.

NonnaW Wed 08-Jun-16 11:25:40

I met someone this weekend called Helsey. Never heard that one before

Elegran Wed 08-Jun-16 11:59:53

I think Moet is pronounced Moway - but I have never drunk any so I could be wrong. Asti Spumante is easier to say and to buy.

JackyB Wed 08-Jun-16 12:18:56

The dots on the "e" in Moët aren't an Umlaut. They separate the vowel sounds so that they are not pronounced as a diphthong.

They are known as a trema or diæresis.

I'm still smiling over Helsey - I wonder if they thought it was a posh form of Elsie.

JackyB Wed 08-Jun-16 12:20:21

Oh sorry - forgot to mention the pronunciation. The same as Noël. So Moway is pretty close.

Bellanonna Wed 08-Jun-16 12:25:02

Yes of course JackyB. Don't think German has umlauts on e? Had just thought if a common word with two dots and my thought processes led me to champagne.....

dorsetpennt Wed 08-Jun-16 17:08:35

When I lived in New York my son was very friendly with a Korean boy, they were both seven years old at the time. The boy's name was Sherlock Sun . I asked his mother why she called him Sherlock, as I knew that many Koreans in N.Y. gave their children an Anglo first name as they felt it was easier for the child. She felt it was the most English name she knew. I didn't tell her that I'd never met another Sherlock , anywhere. My Korean paediatric doctor named her son after my son, Edward, as she thought it was a royal name.

Nampam Wed 08-Jun-16 20:06:45

My son was at school with twins called Andrew and Peter Ness...ok till you've to sign your name.smile A school teacher friend had an Excalibur in her class, last seen being escorted from the school by two policemen. Do you think the name affects the child?