What is in a name? In this case, many letters.
A parent has revealed the list of her child’s second grade friends, annoying people with some of their weird names.
Redditor – who said they live in the northeast in a rural area that, sometimes, “feels like the deep south” – shocked names like “Skiler”, “Emmitt” and “Course”, pronounced “Kirsten” in two different forums of names, promoting a staggering response.
“Appreciate the names of second grade friends,” she wrote on Reddit, explaining that she had received the list so that her child would make Valentine.
The list also includes monikers such as “Averiella”, “Lakendren”, “Raleigh”, “Keegan”, “Kohen” and “Paisyn”. Some classmates also had more traditional names, such as “Ella”, “Ian” and “Brooklyn”.
“Thoughts? Thoughts? Prayers? “She wrote in another forum.
Other Reddiors tried to understand the pronunciation of some of the names, calling the spelling “criminal”.
“I feel like some of these pronunciations should be considered a crime,” wrote a bold commentator. “Maybe this is dramatic. Well, a misdemeanor, but some of these are fair criminals. “
“First Thought”, another was pleaded. “Their parents are illiterate.”
“Half of these poor children will grow up making their names having fun and misused,” someone else mourned. “
The viral post comes in the middle of a number of young children’s names to make the new generation, Gen Beta.
For example, some parents are looking for their fluffy friends for inspiration, naming their children after dogs.
Meanwhile, others are choosing names for “luxury” children or titles sounding like weapons, the latter a trend that has alarmed naming experts.
“Is this a trend with millennial parents, or has it always been so?” asked a Gen Zer in Reddit.
They said they “do not remember” any of their classmates with unique monikers, adding that “even if the name was” made up “, it was at least easy to pronounce and pronounced.”
However, an elderly user informed them that “unfortunately, tragic Wound every generation, is just the actual tendency in the way they are made. “
They clarified that boomers and Gen X favored the exchange of names that traditionally end up in “y” to end up in “I”, such as “Sandi” or “quarrel”, while Millennials “enjoyed many surnames like pre-names, “like” Madison “.
“General Z and the youngest are getting some of the scratch plates like names these days,” they withdrew.
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Image Source : nypost.com