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names2 235x300 When the alphabet vomits on a birth certificate.

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This is not a column about children with wacky names. It’s not about the little boy called Notorious or his sister Awesome. It’s not about Chanel or Bongo or Stalin or Mars even though all those kids exist. There will be no mention of Apple or Sparrow. Not here. Not today.

This particular column is about Sindi. And Kymberleigh. And Lyriq and Xal (pronounced Crystal) and Paege and Beeanchor (say it out loud, you’ll get it eventually) and Jazz-man and Ararhbella and Sumher. It’s also about Jamze, Taiylah, Khrystie, Jesinta, Naithon and Maddissonne and Mersaydeez.

This column is about what happens when the alphabet vomits on a birth certificate. It’s about wacky spelling and the parents who inflict it on their children.

The Patron saint of trickily spelled names may be Kath & Kim’s Epponee Rae but tricky spelling is not a new phenomenon. And we know this because the first generation afflicted by it are coming of age.

When I do book signings, you have to be very careful to get the spelling of someone’s name right, lest you stuff up the copy of your book they’ve just bought (bless them). You must never take anything for granted. “Hello Anna, nice to meet you!” I say. “And how do you spell Anna?” Seriously. Because these days, it could also be Annah, Ana or Anar.

A couple of weeks ago, I read about a girl dating cricketer Michael Clarke. Her name was Kyly. Yes, Kyly. When I remarked upon this, someone I know called Kylie wondered, “What did her parents have against vowels?”

name1 When the alphabet vomits on a birth certificate.

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Having enquired among those who know trickily spelt people and those who named them, my suspicions have been confirmed. It’s not about vowel discrimination (Tylr) or a love of silent letters (Tcharli) or phonetics (Moneeke). The root of tricky spelling is a desire to be different. Special. Unique. Which is fine on a birth certificate but more challenging in the real world where people communicate verbally.

My parents named me Mia for a number of reasons, chief among them that they weren’t a fan of nicknames and thought Mia wouldn’t be shortened. They were right about that but what they didn’t factor in was that many people are stupid. You’d think a name with three letters which was pronounced phonetically wouldn’t pose too many problems but you’d be so wrong.

For years my name has mistakenly been pronounced “My-a” or spelt incorrectly. In fact whenever someone has to write my name down, I automatically launch into: “Mia – M-I-A” before going on to spell my surname.

The other day I asked the name of a salesperson I was speaking to on the phone and she replied “Mia – M-I-A” so it appears it’s not just me.

I’m telling you this because if my simple name is going to cause problems? What hope is there for poor Beeanchor. How many years of her life will she waste explaining “It’s BIANCA, yes I know it’s unusual to spell it like that.” A burdensome number. And will it make her feel special? Or will it just make her parents feel clever?

Here’s a clue: any name that requires you to add “pronounced…” after it is an undue burden to place on another human being.

I asked on Twitter about tricky spellings this week and got some doozies. One person who works in family law said: “The best names I’ve seen through my work are La-a (pronounced: Ladasha), Abcde (Ab-se-dee) and the very popular Nevaeh (Heaven backwards)”. Someone who worked at a Brisbane maternity ward said staff keep a running list of the weirdest names. Current winner: N-ah (Nadasha).

Stop it. I’m calling DOCS.

But WHY? I asked. Often the reasons were quite specific. “My friend named her daughter Olyvia, reason given was that her name is Melyssa” said one person. I also heard from the creatively spelled themselves. Like Rihannon. “It’s meant to be Rhiannon but my dad made a spelling mistake on my birth certificate. I’m now forever correcting people.” And Tiffiny. “I hate it! I never get my emails and all because mum didn’t want me nicknamed Fany”. Then there were the traditional spellings like the Irish name Aoibhe (pronounced Ava) and the Celtic name Niamh (pronounced Neev).

But it was generally agreed by everyone that the most common reason for tricky spelling is a desire for your child to be different. Special. Unusual. Unique.

In researching this column, I came across a forum on a baby names site with the following question from a pregnant woman. “I love the name Chloe but I don’t like the spelling. I love changing spelling around…is there anyone that thinks that Khloei is just too weird of a change? Or Lili? And for a boy or girl the name Aiden going to Aydyn?”

The response was fairly rigorous and unanimously negative. As one person said: “I am not completely opposed to spelling variations, within reason (e.g., Alan/Allen, Catherine/Katherine), but completely odd and invented spellings are not my thing.”

I wanted to reply: “If you really don’t like the spelling of the name, have you considered, I don’t know, CHOOSING ANOTHER NAME?”

Like Apple. Pronounced Apple.

NOTE: This column/post is dedicated to my (real) friends Nikoll and Garry. And while I’m sure that many people will have quite strong views on this subject, please stay respectful. Be nice. Remain cool.

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1,373 Comments so far

  1. picardie.girl

    I am so, so grateful my parents did a great job with names. All three of us (me and my two sisters) have great first and middle names. Yay Mum and Dad!
    Weird name spellings annoy me and, as pointed out by Kath and Kim and The Chaser, are often the mark of a bogan family. I think we should go like Japan and have a register of acceptable spellings (they have a list of “name characters”) that you can choose from. Not on the list = not acceptable!!

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  2. Anonymous

    I have a friend with a ‘Jayke’ and a ‘Jae’ – for heaven’s sake what were they thinking? Those poor kids will be spelling their names to people their whole life!!
    I should know….I have been saying ‘Kathy with a ‘K” for as long as I can remember….

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  3. Em

    My name is Emma and I am forever grateful to my parents for it!

    My husband has the extra letter thing going on, and is an uncommon name for Australia. Its a pain in the bum! He even has an alias to pick up pizza. Having to say, and spell his name just to pick up a pizza is far too much trouble so they know him as GREG! hehe!

    My children will be getting ‘normal’ names spelt the traditional way. If they want to be ‘different’ they can grow a mohawk! ;-)

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    • Belle

      Thats so funny, my husband has an alias too!! He uses my maiden name as both his first and surname are very european. The lady at the chinese restaurant knows him as “Ryan”. hehe

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  4. OhMeOhMy!!

    My husband and I tried to pick names that weren’t too common at the time (but where the spelling was OK). We chose Hayden and Kelsey…and funnily enough there weren’t may kids with these names during primary or secondary school. :)

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  5. Christie

    Yes I curse bad spellings – I get Kristie, Kristi, Chrystie and how ever many more! I had a client on the phone and she asked for my name spelling and then stated that “yes, thats great, your parents did well, they spelled your name properly.”

    Unfortunately with the sms’ing, the emailing styles and really tacky way of communication for a lot of people, presently is incredibly lazy and unfortunate – I have high expectations of my own spelling and communication style therefore, we have to teach our own kids.

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    • ChristieV

      Good to see another Christie spelt the right way ;)

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  6. Alana

    I love this column Mia. It reminds me of The Chaser skit when the boys fined people for bogan baby names. I particularly dislike Michaela being spelt Mikayla.

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    • Pud

      I hate that too. My cousin changed the spelling of her daughter’s name to Makayla and she admitted it was because she was terrible at spelling and found spelling Michaela ‘too hard’. A pretty lazy reason for changing the spelling if you ask me…

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    • Happymum

      Same.

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    • Melissa

      I think Mikayla is the traditional spelling in some Eastern European cultures.

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    • Mic

      Thank you! I’m Michaela and its dreadful seeing my name spelled with all these ys! I know one girl who spelt it with a y because she ‘liked my ys!’. Hideous!

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  7. kateo

    my mum’s name is virginia and my dads tobin we get letters to “vagina” and “tony” or “robin” ALL the time… so they called all us kids short normal names

    One would think that Kate would be simple enough… no I have gone through life with people calling me Katherine!!!!

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    • Cake

      I totally agree with you Kateo. Everyone always asks me if I’m Katherine – which my mother hates as she can’t stand that name.

      best thing about kate is that it can’t be lengthened so when I’m in trouble the bf can’t say ‘kaaaaaate’ the way I can extend his name.

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  8. L

    Names with strange spellings drive me crazy! Whenever we’re discussing children, my boyfriend (thinking he’s hilarious) says if we have a girl we’ll name her ‘Seven’ pronounced Tania..

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    • Carolyn

      I actually think he’s hilarious too.

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      • lisa

        seinfeld anyone…

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        • me

          lol, not the Tania bit, that was never on Seinfeld.

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  9. Alison

    I always spell my name, both first and last as its just easier. My aunty has called me “Blossom” all my life – and should have stuck to it as on our wedding card she wrote “Dear Allyson”!!

    My daughter is called Imogen, classic English/Shakespearian name, spelt normally. But the number of times I’ve been asked if we made her name up, or asked if it was Emma-jen (not likely!) or people commenting with “oh, how unusual” really blows me away. I’m used to it now but it was frustrating after picking a normal, traditional name and yet people don’t question some of the weird names!

    By the way I once worked with a woman who’s friend named their daughter Chevette as their two favourite cars were a Chevy and a Corvette!!

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    • Cordeline

      I have an Imogen too and said on my post how her name sometimes is pronounced incorrectly! The G is said as in ‘Gate’ rather than as in ‘Ginger’. One other woman kept calling her ImoGENE which drove me insane. I told her every time she said it that it was not GENE on the end!

      As a complete coincidence, our other daughter also has a Shakespearian name.

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  10. Emilie

    Even people I’ve known my whole life can’t spell my name. I’m Emilie, which is the traditional french spelling, and I don’t mind it. But EVERYONE spells it Emily, or disturbingly Emma-Lee. Now when talking on the phone or registering anywhere I automatically start to spell it, and am often told ‘I know how to spell Emily!!!’ Well, no you don’t. My middle name is Clare and I wasn’t sure until age 18 whether it was Clare or Clair (or Claire). Annoying!

    *no offense mum and dad!

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  11. Michelle Barraclough

    With 10 weeks till my due date, we are right in the thick of the naming debate. One thing I’ve learned is to keep our short-list of names to ourselves.

    When I mentioned I liked a certain name to a few female relatives in their 20s, they looked at each other with raised eyebrows. “What?” I said, looking from one to the other. “Oh nothing,” they replied, “It’s just that there are a lot of skanky girls with that name around at the moment.”

    So that name, which was my firm favourite, is now off the list.

    So now I’ve had to come up with a new favourite. Suffice to say, it won’t be spelt strangely. I mean, Apple Sunday is pretty straightforward isn’t it?!

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    • ChristieV

      Ahahaha love it. I’ve got another 24 weeks to go, but yes have already learned to keep our list to ourselves. Everybody has an opinion and they just loooooove to share it! ;)

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  12. Sarah

    Sarah.

    S.A.R.A.H.

    Sarah.

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    • Sarah

      I often get asked “how do you spell that?” and I mean… Sarah? Not that hard. At best you could say “Is that with a h on the end?” but even then you should be able to work it out by the pronounciation and while half of the name has the phoenetic emphasis (Sa-raaa is with a h. Saa-ra is no h.)

      Hilarious cock ups on my name have included a relief teacher who asked me if my name was pronouced “Saharah” (no idea why, and it amused the whole class!)

      For crying out loud! How much simpler can you get than Sarah??!!

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  13. MelC

    My parents had a friend called Gay Gay (her married name!).

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    • String

      I once knew someone called Gay Walker too. And someone called my Dad taught with someone called Sandy Brown. Both true.

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    • Really need to get my own name

      I worked with a woman named Gay Boys once. I never had the heart to ask if that was her married name or not.

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    • E-m

      I know a Gay Lemon who, coincidentally, is a lesbian.

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  14. Dea

    I am always having to spell my full name. My first because otherwise Deanna becomes Dianna. How DEE-anna is confused with DI-anna is beyond me. With my surname people often hear a double n instead of m.

    In my job as receptionist I will say Goodmorning/afternoon Deanna speaking and often get “Hello Fiona” AAARRRGGGHHHHH!!!

    I just had a gentleman come in and ask my name, he got DEE-AH from Deanna and then after the third time goes ohh DI-anna ?!?!?!

    And don’t get me started on my nick-name. If it is written people think it pronounced Dear. I know it would be easier to spell it Dee but I only have one E in my name so I just shorten it to DEA.

    When I have kids my partner and I have decided that we love Isabella Lee, Ruby Lee and Jasper Mark (Lee beacuse it is both mine and his middle name and Mark after my dad) ohhh and Isabella would be shortened to Izzie not Bella lol :-D

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    • Em

      LOL! When I say “Emma speaking” I often get, “Hi Anna!”

      I also get people who just start calling me Emily!

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      • jessicalee

        when i say “Jessica speaking” i get “oh HI Jacqui”!!
        I HATE it, i say my name clearly and they still get it wrong. even people i have corrected call up the next day and still call me Jacqui!!! Jessica doesn’t even sound like Jacqui. I don’t get it.

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        • Elli

          The best one I ever got answering the phone ‘Hello Raphaela speaking’ was ‘Oh, hello Phyllis’! o.O It probably didn’t help that I pronounce it the ‘proper’ way (rolled r etc) rather than the australian way. But the most common one I get is ‘Oh hi Anna’ (my Mum’s name) I mean, I know I sound like her a bit.. but were you listening??
          I’ve had to spell or repeat my name my whole life and am fairly used to it, my parents are european so all my siblings have names like mine. It’s only recently that I stopped having to spell my Polish surname when I got married hehe.

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    • Kris2040

      I started a class with a chick called Diana last week, she introduced herself like “Dearna”.

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      • Dea

        ohhh I sometimes get my name pronounced like that. I personally hate being called that. I always say there is no R in my name so don’t say it lol

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        • Kris2040

          One of my friends is Deanne – how hard is it? You wouldn’t call Leanne Lee-Arne, why would Deanne or Deanna be any different??

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          • Elli

            I sympathise completely.. somehow when I introduce myself people always manage to turn Raphaela into Raphii-ela, it makes me cringe everytime. Theres no ‘I’ in it!! And another one I managed to get from one of my Botany lecturers was Raphayla – he obviously spends too much time around latin plant names.

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    • Anna: Mum of one

      as a Deanne…I sympathise…and I also get called Fiona by phone customers..

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    • Rexy

      hehehe there is a girl at work whose name is Branka and she gets ‘Bianca’ or ‘Rhonda’ on the phone – i guess people think they will just have a go! If i don’t quite catch the name, i usually don’t refer to them by any name – or ask them to repeat it!

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  15. dael

    hi mia,
    this is a fantastic column having grown up with a name like Dael (dale) i have been correcting people all my life. I also have a sister Jodee and a brother Braddyn – we area all now in our late 20′s and early 30′s so i guess our parents thought they were pretty creative back then
    cheers
    dael

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    • Elisha

      Dale is one of my most favourite names. And I quite like your spelling!

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  16. Because I'm The Mum

    My husband ran our children’s names past his most childish friend to see if he could come up with any inappropriate nicknames that could be made out of them. Our only other rule when naming our kids was that the boys names could be shouted across the pub and not sound lame. I think we’ve done ok. We’ve got Jenna, Hayden and Liam. Although Jenna gets Jemma all the time, or Jen which she really doesn’t like. Hayden gets Haydn (????). I think everyone can spell Liam so far…..

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    • Kris2040

      LOL That sounds like Homer and Marge deciding on Bart’s name.
      What about Louie?
      Marge, he’d get Screwy Louie!

      Bart. What about Bart?
      Hmm, Lets see – Art, Bart, Cart, Dart, E-art. No thats OK, Bart it is!

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      • Really need to get my own name

        I never really got that bit of the Simpsons. Hello, FART??

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        • Chrissy

          That was the point of the joke – they stopped just BEFORE they got to fart

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        • Kris2040

          Bingo! LOL

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    • Cerry

      Haydn? Really? Just when you think people can’t get any more ignorant (the people spelling it that way, not you). I’d just about guarantee that at least a few of the people who spell it that way are working on the premis that they’ve seen it written that way before, not realising that the context they’ve seen it in is a classical composer’s last name which is pronounced Hi-den, not Hay-den.

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      • ChristieV

        My grandmother lives on Haydn Street in Blackburn, VIC. Has for 50 years.

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  17. Cordeline

    I ran into a girl I went to high school with a couple of months ago. She introduced her daughter to me, her name was Chilli. Whilst it was of course an odd name, I cannot stop thinking, how is it spelt?

    Chilli (like the spice)
    Chile (like the country)
    Chilly (like the weather)

    She said she also had an older son…. I’m often pondering what his name might be… Garlic? Brazil? Warm?

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    • Shannon

      Reminds me of Blue’s Clues, with Mr Salt, Mrs Pepper and their kids Paprika and Cinnamon.

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    • String

      When I was pregnant with my third child, our older two kids were obsessed with the idea that we should call the baby Chilli. But even they saw reason eventually and realized it was a daft name. They’re 5 and 3. Apparently smarter than that lady was!

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  18. Clarewithanenotani

    Obviously I have had many years of having to spell my name…my daughters both have names that I invariably hear ‘isn’t that a boys name/surname’ (and one has an apostrophe – the horror!) and my son has a reasonably common name, but with Welsh spelling…I’m going straight to the bad mummy corner!

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    • Happy and Clear

      OMG. How funny. My middle name is ‘Clair with an i not an e’.

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  19. maya

    I know a girl called Jorja…it took weeks until i heard it pronounced out and realised it’s Georgia…

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    • pt

      Jorja is a traditional Polish spelling of Georgia..

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      • Marta

        I assure you there is no such thing as Jorja in Polish. Greetings from Krakow

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  20. Quixotic

    I quite like the Irish names (maybe my Celtic blood showing through), but yes, the spelling is tricky on them, but at least they aren’t made up, like Ahyden or Muhlyssah or what have you.

    Mind you, my name is a supposed ‘normal’ name – Lauren – and I always have to spell it. It’s a pretty popular name now, but as a kid no-one had ever heard of it – my Grandpa called me Wassername for the first few months, and I could never get trendy pencil cases, door plaques etc. with my name on them as a kid. Poor me… :)

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    • Kris2040

      Lauren, really? I thought Lauren was a pretty consistently popular name!

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      • Miss Meerkat

        I get asked to spell Lauren all the time and I even had someone say to me the other day, ‘Oh what a unusual, pretty name’. I was lost for words and didn’t know how to respond because I think my name is very common

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  21. AusMossy

    This explains the problems I have been having. I have a traditional name with traditional spelling, John. Could there be anything more traditional? I can’t believe how many times I have to spell it for people. I get Jon, Jhon… or worst of all Jonny. Naybe the new and ‘inventive’ names are mostly down to a lack of spelling skills. It’s the text message generation inflicting their lack of grammar on their kids.

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  22. MrsT

    Also guilty? Southerners in the States. The following are actual members of my family: Ferrell (pronounced ‘feral’), Elliotte, Kennedy (all girls), Bentley (as in the car) and Grayson (yes, like Jason but not). Sigh.

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  23. Sunny

    I heard about a little boy called Cream this week.

    Oh the quest to be different.

    At least that spelt it right. I guess.

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    • Law Student

      I saw a child named “North” in the paper a while back. No idea if it was a boy or a girl.

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  24. Tony

    There is a girl called Kasey Stacey! She got married though, so is no Kasey someone-else.

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  25. Me

    I knew a Pheonuh (Fiona)!

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  26. fee283

    i never realised spelling ‘fiona’ would be difficult – until the time someone repeated it to me as ‘phyona’… really? really? i understand when people shorten it to ‘fi’ instead of ‘fee’ though – i just prefer the phonetic spelling of it… i don’t understand how people think i’m a ‘jenny’ or ‘sarah’ when i say my name on the phone though… =S

    mum & dad not only went through names they liked, but thought up nicknames & initials that wouldn’t mean anything so we wouldn’t be teased for our names… love them…

    i was gonna be a ‘samantha’ or a ‘tabitha’ but mum dedided it was a little too bewitched… think i would’ve been an awesome ‘sam’… but since ‘fiona’ means ‘fair one’ & i’m the whitest person you’ve ever met, i think it fits =D

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    • Fiona

      lol I’m a Fiona too and very fair as well. I used to work in a call centre and customers would always get my name wrong. I used to get called Deanna, Leona, Sienna lol. I don’t mind people calling me either Fi or Fee.

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  27. JosieY

    Actually, most people get my spelling right, but now I introduce myself as Josephine because I ALWAYS ALWAYS get called Tracey. Why? Is Josie so hard? It’s not even unusual!

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    • Josie

      Hi Josie Y

      My name is Josie too and I always get Tracey. So annoying. Especially when I answer the phone at work and say my name they always say Tracey. I don’t even bother correcting them anymore.

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    • Quixotic

      Yep, I answer the phone Lauren and get “Hi, Laura…”

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      • Lauren

        Me too!!!! Drives me insane!!

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    • Shannon

      I often get, “Hi Sharon, thanks Sharon” etc. at work.

      I wear a name tag. It says Shannon. Often, I don’t even tell them my name, they read it and then pronounce in Sharon.

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    • Stacey

      I’m a Stacey but ALWAYS get Josie when I answer the phone!

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    • Kris2040

      When I worked in a call centre, I used to answer Kris but get Trish and once I got Phil. As in a bloke. I have a reasonably deep voice, but I think I still sound like a girl!

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    • RRad

      My name is Renee (with an accent on the ‘e’ but can’t do it here!) and I always got Lorraine on the phone! And I too have to spell it out because of the variations on spelling. And don’t get me started on Ren-knee! Argh! Sometimes wish my Dad got his way and called me Billie. Then again, maybe not.

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      • bedlam

        Hold down ‘ALT’ while typing 130 should get you an accent :)

        ALT + 130 = é

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        • Danielle Too.

          SO cool, thank you, I never knew how to do that. Do now. éééé

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  28. Emma

    My name is simple, Emma Davey (no stalkers please). I played many sports at school and always had to spell my own name, no, it’s not Ema, Emily, Anna, Hannah or most recently as Ama at a restaurant booking, and no it’s not Davis, Davies, Davids or Davidson (I don’t remember mentioning any plurals when I spoke my name…). So I feel very sorry for the Beeanchor’s, Ellysha’s, Meeghan’s or Jaymiee’s of the world.

    Thank go my parents didn’t call me Victoria, their first chosen name, but then realised not to, as my initials would have been “VD”.

    Why are there many girls names with “unique” spellings and not many boys? Or have I just not heard of them yet….

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  29. Leni

    Alexander Macleay, the botanist who lived at Elizabeth Bay house in Sydney, named his daughter Kennethina Macleay (obviously hoping for a son).

    I met a women whose last name could also be used as a first name. When she had her first child her last name was used as its first name: Nicholas whatever. I think that is pretty poor planning.

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    • Kris2040

      Nigella Lawson and her sisters are the same, Thomasina and Horatia, ie Nigel, Thomas and Horatio.

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  30. Bejazzled

    My name is very plain, and my nan has never once spelt it correctly. My surname is basic, yet I always spell it for people. I think it doesn’t matter that your name is weird or not, people can’t spell, and worse they simply don’t listen when you tell them your name & don’t care either.

    ‘What’s in a name’. Its pretty easy to change your name so I’m sure some of the more quirky ones might be changed in the future. Is it any worse than people hyphenating surnames, some of those are ridiculous!

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  31. Bionda

    My name is Italian – Eleonora. In Kindergarten the teacher said that it was way too long!!! and so shortened it to Ele (pronounced Elly) My parents were soooooo p-d off and so with their very limited English asked the teacher to change it! My friend is married to an Algerian and has the Arabic spelling of Zakariyah for their son. She’s so upset that people think she’s tryng to be different when she was only being traditional!! Oh, and I taught a M’Lyssaa a few years ago!

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    • Kris2040

      One of my Muslim friends has all Z named kids – Zaydan, Zahara, etc. She has one on the way and wants another Z name.

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  32. S

    We struggled with names as we could not agree on anything. My name is Sarah, I have two sisters Jane and Kate and my brother is James so I really didn’t want to be too boring – I think all our names were in the top ten for most of the 70s and 80s, so boring!! What did we end up with?? Sophie and Lily – it is just like my Mum said – you chose the names you like and apparently everyone else likes them too – no shame in that! S

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  33. Allison Dennis

    After years of having to say “Allison, A-double L-ison”, I was determined that my children would a) not have to constantly spell their names and b) be able to buy things with their name on it from the shops (something that was always a rarity for me!). My husband and I chose Thomas – we thought it couldn’t be any more straightforward, yet we are still constantly asked to confirm the spelling!!! My husband too is a school teacher – nothing gets names vetoed off the list faster than when a parent is a teacher!! :)

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    • JT

      My maiden last name is Tomas and I cannot tell you how many people mess that up. Thomas with no “H”, yet they still write Thomas. I answered to Thomas for everything but legal stuff. So I find it funny that they cannot spell your son’s name. We plan on using Thomas as a middle name since I do not want my son to have to go through what I did growing up.
      And my husband is also a teacher so we are having trouble finding a first name because so many names have been vetoed!

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  34. Polly

    I am a Margie, and seen people write it down as Argie and even call me Barbie..
    People can NEVER spell Margaret or sometimes even say it so I just introduce as Margie.

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    • fee283

      my middle name is margaret & it took me forever to remember how to spell it since i rarely wrote it! =S

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      • Kris2040

        Haha same! I like it, and have actually considered using Margaret (or Maggie) as my name before.

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  35. Casey

    My name’s Casey and I have had so many problems with it over the years. Hardly anyone ever spells it correctly – my spelling is the conventional one – and instead I get Kasey, Kaci, Kacee,Caci, you name it.Not to mention people confusing it with Tracey, Stacey, and the one I hate the most: Katie. It’s also a unisex name so people often assume I’m a male before they meet me. I sometimes wish that my parents had chosen something a little less easily confused with other names.

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    • JennyWren

      I know a Cacee….

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  36. lizzie

    Names are funny things… even ones that your think are going to be easy like Vicky… yes V I C K Y. Who would have thought there could be so many spelling variations of that one, and then the assumption that my name is actually Victoria, and I just shorten it – which for the record it isn’t and I don’t. Then this is my son’s name – Aston – That’s AstOn – no H, not an I when the O is, no U before the S… Often helps when I same his name if I add – you know – like the car, Aston Martin? (which btw is not the reason he is Aston – that’s another story lol)

    and now I’m laughing because instead of posting under my real name – I have an alter ego – Lizzie – as in Lizzie Bennett.

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    • Hayley

      I am always getting called Amy! and I don’t think Hayley is especially odd (though heaps of spelling variations).
      I don’t mind how they spell my name – as long as the intention is to write Hayley :)

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  37. Alex

    Hi Mia

    You should make yourself aware of the racist underpinnings of a lot of urban myths about babies’ names.

    The story about the girl called “N-ah” is a common one, and Snopes was unable to find any evidence of it. It’s commonly used as a racist story about African Americans, usually followed by a “and we let these people vote?” kind of comment.

    If you’re interested, google “the dash don’t be silent”. It’s been addressed by a number of feminist websites.

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    • Faybian

      Any decent baby name book has names from different cultures in it and most of them aren’t the same as the made up ones we that work with children have come across

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    • Nicky Champ

      There was no racism intended for this article, just a open discussion about unusually spelt names from a variety of different cultures.

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  38. Anonymous

    I had heard of a woman who liked the name Auriel but wanted to make it unique so added a l’ in front. Its now pronounced like the cosmetics brand.

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  39. Kristy

    Naming a baby is hard enough without having to think of some super funky cool spelling. Just choose something you can easily find on a key chain, people! :)

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  40. Rara

    I once taught a kid called Clever – unfortunately, he wasn’t. I too loathe weird spelled names. I like different names, but would not necessarily call my kids them. I have worked with a couple of people with awesome names -

    Epiphanio
    Eraclia
    Fatima
    Achilles
    Yessenia
    Florencia wouldn’t call any of my kids them, but they are kind of cool in their own way.

    My son is Xavier. Since I am Aussie and my husband is Latino, it was difficult to find a boy’s name we could agree on. It is pronounced Zavier in Aus and Sah-vee-air with Spanish pronunciation. In Aus he often gets called X-avier and in Peru he often gets called Javier (ha-vee-air)Names are complicated.

    I am Rachel, but have been called Rebecca all my life by people forgetting my name.

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    • Jacqui Freiberg

      LittleDude is at daycare with a kid named Hero! Undies on the inside though… :D

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      • Faybian

        What a name to try to live up to

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      • Miranda

        “Hero” is the female romantic lead in Shakespeare’s “Much Ado About Nothing” – wonder if that’s where they got it from?! Great play but I still wouldn’t name my kid after it!

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        • Kris2040

          I have nicked Ben from Benedick – its a cool name anyway, but I wouldn’t give a kid Benedick to have to explain. Beatrice is one of my favourite characters EVER, but I wouldn’t do that to a kid either. Maybe as a middle name? And Katharina and Petruchio from Taming of the Shrew – Katharine and Patrick.

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          • Kate Geikowski

            Is Benedick a different version of Benedict? I have never seen the name Benedick before…

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            • Kris2040

              I guess so – here’s what Wiki says about the significance of the names:

              Benedick: Benedick means “blessed”; the root bene means “good.” Note that Benedick and Beatrice have similar meanings. The name can also be interpreted as the two words bene (Latin for “good”) and dicere (Latin for “to speak”). This is a reference to his unusual eloquence.

              Hero: In Greek mythology, Hero was the lover of Leander. Each night Leander swam across the Hellespont to meet her. When he accidentally drowned while crossing, she threw herself in the water and drowned as well.

              Beatrice: Beatrice means “the one that blesses.” Note that Benedick and Beatrice have similar meanings.

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      • Rara

        Haha too funny. There is a Japanese name Hiro – it wouldn’t be meant to be that would it?

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        • Ms. Butlertron

          Usually it’s short for Hiroshi, Hiroyuki, etc etc. Most common meaning is ‘generous’.

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        • Jacqui Freiberg

          Aaaahhhh that makes more sense. Thanks!

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  41. Kristen

    Names are funny things. Even my name, boring old Kristen, has caused me countless problems over the years. Usually people can spell it correctly, although I get the occasional salesperson who will write ‘Christen’, or ‘Kristin’. Understandable, especially when you consider the numerous variations of my name: Christy/Kristy, Christina/Kristina, Chrystal/Krystal, Kirsty/Kirsten..
    If I had a dollar for every time I introduced myself to a person as Kristen, only for this person to call me Kirsten at least once (at least!!), I could buy myself a small island, half a dozen cruise ships, and have enough money left over for a shopping spree at Tiffany’s (sounds nice! But I digress). I could shorten it to Krissy, but I already have a friend called Kristen who has ‘claimed’ this nickname, and in any case I don’t think it would stick.
    I know this isn’t strictly related to spelling or pronunciation, but I have to warn new parents who are considering the name Kristen/Kirsten: THINK TWICE before going there.

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    • Kris2040

      Yep, I get Kristen too. And I totally agree with thinking twice about names like ours!!!

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  42. guest

    My mum used to work with a young architect. She was stunning, intelligent and always beautifully presented. Her name? Trevorliene. As in the female version of Trevor. Trev-or-leen. I have never gotten over it.

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  43. Anonymous

    Do they still teach spelling in school? Doesn’t seem like it. It seems word documents and mobile phone texting just automatically correct all spelling anyway.

    No wonder there’s so many names spelt phonetically!

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    • o.O

      O! u jst made me LOL!! Spel’g @ skool? What a cute, old-fashn’d thing 2 do!

      Seriously, though…you make a very good point.

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    • Kris2040

      Apparently not – my friends’ Yr 7 son on his Facebook last week, answering his Pop’s question as to what something meant in English:

      its frekles but pop she yells at u for the slitest mestake

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  44. Adrienne

    I have a friend who was a school teacher and he vetoed practically every name his wife suggested for their first born because he had always taught at least one kid with the name that he couldn’t stand. Finally, in desperation and worried that the child would be weeks old before having her own name,she suggested that he find a name he liked with a spelling that he could live with. He found one and justified it by saying that it was an old Anglo- Saxon spelling. Phelissitie is now a grown woman who logically enough studied speech pathology and teaches English as a second language!

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    • Anonymous

      I agree- I am a teacher and you have always taught a kid with the names you used to like. I liked Sophia until I taught one that drove me spare.

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      • Jenni Maundrell

        My sister and cousin said the same thing. My sister had the added problem that her husband could think of some sarcastic nickname for almost everything she actually did like.

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  45. Mish

    I once met a lovely girl called Imfat. She was middle eastern, and while I’m all for cultural diversity and unique names, its one case where her parents really should have changed her name when they moved to Australia. Especially since she was a very large girl… she looked so embarrassed when she told me her name and I really felt for her.

    Parents also need to think about how the names go together- I once met a Darn Small (no, its not a joke, I saw his drivers license) and a girl whose initials put together were STD. Yikes.

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    • Julie

      I absolutely second the advice to think about how names go together. In my elementary school growing up, there was a girl named Christie Christie. (Well, to be fair, her first name was Christina, but “Christina Christie” isn’t much better!) I can understand marrying into an unfortunate combination, but from birth? Shame on the parents!

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      • Mish

        I also met a Leigh Lee. Confusion every time she had to say her name!!

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      • Mish

        Oh, and my ex wanted to call our daughter “Tetris Mushroom Cassette”. I’m not even joking, we had many an argument about it. Thank GOD he finally agreed to calling her Poppy. And he wonders why we are not still together, LOL!

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      • Jacqui Freiberg

        A girl in my year at school was Christina Sfetina, and her sister was Tina Sfetina! I was dumbfounded.

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        • Kris2040

          LOTS of wog names are family names – that is why you end up with cousins with the same names and stuff. I actually think its not such a bad idea – stops the stupid bogan creative spellings!

          Think of My Big Fat Greek Wedding – when Toula’s dad introduces the family, they all have the same names!

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      • MrsT

        My mother’s maiden name was Christie Christopher…!!

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    • Nicole

      I went to school with a rebekah Kerr and her dads name was Wayne, seriously!
      Parents need to think carefully

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      • MrsT

        Dad went to uni with a Richard Head.

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        • Kris2040

          We had a minister for gaming here in NSW called Richard Face.

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      • Melanie

        ha! i know these people! are they in WA?

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      • mizanthrop

        My husband was taught at uni by a Prof Butter, his son was name Roland.

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      • JT

        When I used to work for Social Services we had a client named Richard Dick. No Joke! Dick Dick. And lo and behold- named his son after him. Dick Dick Jr. I still can’t get over that!!

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  46. Guest

    Honestly, if I ever met anyone named La-a, I think I would call them “Lahyphena” just to make a point!

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    • Alana

      Me too. How stupid.

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  47. Megan Tuffley

    Yes, another Megan Jane!!
    I love my name. It was chosen by my father, after, of all things, his ex-girlfriend’s sister.
    Thank god it wasn’t after his ex-girlfriend. Her name was Blodwyn.

    I taught two girls with unfortunate names. One was Peta, pronounced Pet uh and the other Otilee….

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  48. Blondie Gal

    My name is Thea – a good Scandinavian name, though I have been told it is used in Greek as a slang for Auntie? Anywho, no one can spell it. I have received mail addressed to Maria, Sophia, Mia etc. My last name is also a Scandinavian pearler.

    My husband’s name is Clancy. After Clancy of the Overflow. His parents were hard core hippies and named him and his brothers after cowboys. People assume his name is spelt with an ‘I’. He often gets receives mail addressed to ‘Fancy.’

    If we have a child we will have to embrace the odd name trend and call the kid Thelonious or Mingus. :-)

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    • Faybian

      I used to love the name Melina (grew up in a very Greek/Italian neighborhood) until I did nursing. In medical terms it is blood in the poo (usually from a bleeding gastric ulcer) and the smell is vile.

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    • Kris2040

      My best mate in infants was Thea. And yeah, it is Greek for Aunty.

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    • OhMeOhMy!!

      Hi Blondie Gal,
      I love the name Clancy it sounds so Aussie, not sure if it is though!!

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      • Blondie Gal

        It’s an old Irish name – hence Chief Wiggum on The Simpsons is called Clancy. My only other reference point for a Clancy…!

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        • Kris2040

          Oh man, I would NEVER tire of that joke. Or Ralph. So many quotes…

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          • Blondie Gal

            Believe me – I work it as much as possible. My favorite is to shriek in a Sarah Wiggum voice “Cah-lancy!”

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            • Kris2040

              Do you call him Piggsy??

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    • Clarewithanenotani

      Definitely have a Thelonious or a Mingus! I was quite partial to Django for my little bloke, but it got the big veto. Sad face.

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    • Lula

      We called one of our boys Clancy – old Irish name, means red-haired warrior. I’m a country girl, and like Banjo Paterson, dream about being back in the bush… ‘he wouldn’t suit the office, Clancy of the Overflow.’

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  49. Amanda

    I can’t remember anyone ever getting the spelling of my name wrong. I do vividly remember one woman telling me “You are the first Amanda I have met that I haven’t hated.” I can’t imagine there would be any kids named my name these days, even though I am in my twenties, my name is so dated.

    I feel that choosing a name was the hardest bit of parenting so far. I still remember the agonizing over it (because of our not wanting to have a name that either my husband or I had known anyone with that name which of course rules out most names). I do have namer’s remorse with regard to my kid’s names, and yes one is mentioned in the above article. Freya, Cian (kee-un) and Niamh are their names. Still okay with the first name we chose, but second thoughts with the last two, which I remember particularly struggling to suggest any for my husband to yay or nay. We both happened to like the sound of Cian and Niamh and I didn’t want to mess with the traditional spelling. Wish I had chosen something else now, so I thought maybe I can just give them each a second middle name (first middle names are their father or grandmother’s name so can’t fall back on) of what I would have named them if I had my time over. So if they tire of them they have something else to choose from. I guess they will either find the name a conversation starter or a burden. Time will tell.

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    • Melissa

      My name is so dated now too. Everyone I’ve ever met called Melissa is born in the 70s or 80s and it was hugely popular for a few years.

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      • Melissa No. 2

        I’m a Melissa as well, and my parents get upset when I mention (in as nice as way as possible) that I don’t really love my name.

        It’s just a hard one to nickname… I’m not ‘Mel’, as I have a friend Melanie who goes by that. ‘Liss’ or ‘Lissy’ is too babyish. In the end, my friends gave me a nickname when I was 13 that is totally removed from Melissa, and it has stuck! These days, almost everyone calls me by my nickname… I once even dated a guy who didn’t realise my real name was actually Melissa until he met my parents and they called me ‘Lissy’!

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        • Melissa

          I love my name!! You know it means ‘honey bee’ in greek :-)
          It annoys me when people call me “Mel” when they just meet me but. I get Liss from all my close friends, and Missy from my family. or… Lissy.. Mel.. Melski…. why fight it.
          I always have to say ‘one L two S’s’ but.

          I guess I should say I’m ‘Melissa no. 3′

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        • Melanie

          I felt very common growing up as a Melanie nicknamed Mel. Are you a Melanie or a Melissa?
          And so many people spell my name Melony which I take quiet offense to since it reminds me of Polony.
          Silly stuff really.

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          • *BrownSugar*

            I am a Melanie too, and have been known as Mel my whole life. But it always peeves me when people assume my name is Melissa or Melinda without even asking me.

            I am always quite perplexed when people spell it ‘Melony’… why do they do that? Then there are the people who spell it ‘Melaine’….aargh.

            And don’t even get me started on the people who try and pronounce it – ‘Mel LAINE ee’!? (Emphasis on the LANE)… It’s really not that hard people!!??? :)

            I have always been happy with my name.

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            • Anonymous

              I was scrolling down through the comments waiting to hear from Melanie’s. I think it’s rude when I have told people my name is Melanie and then they go and call me Melinda or Melissa or Mel. Growing up I used to let it slide but now i’m in my late twenties I actually correct people if they say the wrong name. I used to go by Mel but I got sick of it and now I mainly go by my full name. Only select people are allowed to call me Mel. Thanks to the Telstra ad more people will be calling us ‘Melony’ it sounds like a fruit..yeah right. Also, Melaine is another common mistake. I think it’s really nice when people get your name right and address you with your full name, it makes you feel good.

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  50. Kris2040

    I was just thinking – maybe if midwives and hospital staff and births, deaths and marriages people make a concerted effort, we could reverse this dumb arsed trend? Like when someone says “Anfernee” they could say “Wow, another one? That is like the 5th one today!” and take away the Indavidyoualitty of it?? ;)

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