Pappa wrote:Sigworthy.Thinking Aloud wrote:I'm easy with most things.

Pappa wrote:Sigworthy.Thinking Aloud wrote:I'm easy with most things.
My Aunt thought it sounded like Lucifer.borealis wrote:mistermack wrote: My ninety-year-old aunt was most put out when my niece was named Lucy.
It's a good atheist name twice over.I would have called "Lucy" as religious name, because it reminds me of Saint Lucia.
Presumably mentioned as one of those activities that is banned for them, like eating unclean food and working on Sabbaths...?Thinking Aloud wrote:"Thinking" is in Leviticus 95:1-55PordFrefect wrote:I don't recall any thinking in the bible either.Thinking Aloud wrote:I don't recall "Pord" at all.PordFrefect wrote:Of course they've been co-opted for use in the fictional accounts of the bible. I'm sure most of the New Testament characters were named using contemporaneous names for the times and locales in which they were penned. They're now considered 'Christian'.
Technically my name is a character from the bible, happily a minor one.![]()
I meant my real name of course.
"...anyone who says it’s “just the Internet” can. And then when they come back, they can
again." - Tigger
Lucky? not unless she's a top notch cook... or she'll never live down the bad 'feast' jokesDries van Tonder wrote:In Afrikaner tradition, the first born son gets his name from the paternal grandfather. The second son gets his name from the maternal grandfather. Hence my name: "Andries". My grandfather's names were "Andries Gottlieb"; fortunately my parents decided to drop the second name. My brother's name is "Petrus". The English equivalents of "Andries" is "Andrew" and for "Petrus" Peter. Both were shortened to "Dries" (Drew) and "Peet" (Pete). My sister was the lucky one; her name is Babette.
I would really be reluctant to give kids a name connected to religion or non-religion
And hard when it counts.Pappa wrote:Sigworthy.Thinking Aloud wrote:I'm easy with most things.
Pappa wrote:Sigworthy.Thinking Aloud wrote:I'm easy with most things.
And she's not a top notch cookSvartalf wrote:Lucky? not unless she's a top notch cook... or she'll never live down the bad 'feast' jokesDries van Tonder wrote:In Afrikaner tradition, the first born son gets his name from the paternal grandfather. The second son gets his name from the maternal grandfather. Hence my name: "Andries". My grandfather's names were "Andries Gottlieb"; fortunately my parents decided to drop the second name. My brother's name is "Petrus". The English equivalents of "Andries" is "Andrew" and for "Petrus" Peter. Both were shortened to "Dries" (Drew) and "Peet" (Pete). My sister was the lucky one; her name is Babette.
I would really be reluctant to give kids a name connected to religion or non-religion
I'm envious. What's the secret?Bella Fortuna wrote:And hard when it counts.Pappa wrote:Sigworthy.Thinking Aloud wrote:I'm easy with most things.
But surely you recollect the CrimeFighter gospels in the babble?borealis wrote:Penn Jillette's girl is called Moxie CrimeFighter and the son Zolten Penn. I think they'd be quite cool atheist names
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 11 guests