I dont know about any simillar examples in my country. We are an egalitarian, democratic nation.
Printable View
I dont know about any simillar examples in my country. We are an egalitarian, democratic nation.
Funny thing is Kevin is not technically an anglo-saxon name , yet, it is white trash in France. There are probably more Scottish and Irish people with the name Kevin than English people. Kevin comes from the Irish name : Caoimhín ([kiːvʲiːnʲ], Middle Irish: Caoimhghín [kəiṽʲʝiːnʲ], Old Irish: Cóemgein.
Yes, you are right. As I said, I used the term "Anglo-Saxon" to refer to names that became popular through the influence of American pop culture. But also through the British one. So let's say the term was used by metonymy.
And I know the Irish saint Kevin of Glendalough:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...evin-black.jpg
I have very high class, old fashioned and strict name. It's not a Croatian name, I got it after my German grand-grandma.
Dang, one of the names I wanna name my future kids is Iris, so that's nice lol.
Idk what mine would be considered, they're both pretty fuckin common in Romania, especially my first name lol, it's like top 3 female names.
Enviado desde mi CLT-L09 mediante Tapatalk
Traditional names were seen as favourable and foreign names less so but now modern sounding names seem to be topping the lists. Some names I've heard sound cute for small babies but will sound a bit strange when they are grown adults XD I was going to choose a Latin name for my second son because it had sentimental meaning but my in laws said it sounded "too Italian" so we decided on a traditional albanian name instead when we registered his birth.