Names from other cultures
Nov. 16th, 2014 08:30 pmWhat are your thoughts on names that are very obviously from a culture that is quite distinct from your own? There are lots of pretty Indian names that I might consider using, but I just encountered a very blonde, blue-eyed little girl called Megumi (which is a Japanese name) and it just struck me as weird.
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Date: 2014-11-16 08:36 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-11-17 01:30 am (UTC)I love Japanese names so fucking much...but im irish/italian so I would feel weird. :/
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Date: 2014-11-17 04:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-11-17 04:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-11-17 06:12 am (UTC)If the names come from different roots, cultures thats fine but I wouldnt want them stick out like a sore thumb
I know a sibset Jharna & Tristan. Its a nice Indian name but not sure where it came from.
I know a few Australian kids who dont have any family connection to their names eg Priya, Mayke, Soraya, Ikaia, Kawa
It does go the other way I also saw this sibset recently: Seerat (Sukhmann, Sargi, Japji, Samreen, Justin, Armaan)
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Date: 2014-11-17 08:11 am (UTC)1. Race doesn't mean culture, so parent(s) may have lived in Japan/India/whatever and class it as their own culture
2. People don't always look the way you expect given their genes, so I'd be leery of making assumptions
3. People have other links - e.g. friend who's Spanish/English but whose father had had connections to the Soviet Union and gave both his kids Russian names.
4. Named after a close friend or non-blood relative?
Spell it right, know what it means, love the connected culture - use it.
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Date: 2014-11-17 08:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-11-19 05:23 pm (UTC)IMHO, I think some people tend to think more in terms of language bases. Indo-European names tend to cross cultures more easily with lots of linguo-centric variations (Charles, Carl, Carla, Charlotte, Carlotta, Lotti, etc.), but when you get into deep linguistic divides between your native culture and another you love, it can seem affected and odd. Not that the names themselves are bad, it just makes people kind of double-take if there's no obvious familial link to the linguistic root of the name.