I like Irene, which is my mom's middle name. I think that could see a comeback.
The first Madison I met is also nine, and there are a lot of them, now.
See, I date this back to Splash.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I like Irene, which is my mom's middle name. I think that could see a comeback.
The first Madison I met is also nine, and there are a lot of them, now.
See, I date this back to Splash.
Yay for returning kitties!!
ION, Z has been nannying in his spare time for various theater friends. Today was his first day with another set of friends' daughter who is 14 months old, and she is apparently laying on her back in the middle of the living room, sighing theatrically and not wanting to have anything to do with him. She's perfectly fine, she just wants to be alone. I'm threatening to buy her a black dress on my lunch break. So. Cute.
My old cat is very happy to have his partner in naps back. Now Hubby is convinced that Shadow loves me more than him, because Shadow guts my hand more enthusiastically when we play Mr. Sock (hand inside two socks, rub the cat belly until retaliation).
Yay for finding Shadow!
Our niece had (maybe still has) an imaginary playmate named Madison. Madison is an extremely naughty girl, who seems to do all sorts of mischief that the niece gets blamed for.
So glad the kitty found you guys, connie!
My grandmothers were Ethel and Winter Valley. You'd think I'm awfully old to have a hippie grandma, but she was Native American.
Mal's middle name is his grandfathers' though - both are/were James.
The DH is very very sick, and home today. I was trying to keep him away from the baby, but now I'm getting sick also. We've been able to watch some TV, though, which we normally don't have time to do. Put in Stargate, discovered that Mal reacts to tense situations on TV. So we broke out the Wonderfalls. I'd bought it for Robert as a gift, and he'd done the same, and then we'd returned one copy, but we'd been saving it.
Looking at the early twentieth century, it seemed to be r, th, l, dis, and dith that were popular sounds for girls names -- Gladys, Edith,There are all sorts of trends. Bible names. My grandmother and her sister were named Myrtle and Hazel--plant names. Beryl is a stone. Sometimes, I think a certain ethnicity influences the trend. The Hulda/Thelma names are German, aren't they? Gladys and Enid are Welsh. The Kathleen/Julia/Aileen/Eileen/Maureen names were favored by Irish Americans.
The first Madison I met is also nine, and there are a lot of them, now.
See, I date this back to Splash.
I was thinking Moonlighting, but I bet you're right.
My grandmothers were Ethel and Winter Valley.
Bernice and Florence, here. Which strike me as so perfectly early 20th century.
My two grandmothers were/are Mary and Mary.
Dave just pulled my backpack in from the car for me. His response, "This is heavy!". I replied that I mentioned this. And he responded, "but it is heavy to me!". My boyfriend is not a weakling so I guess it is heavy.
I am a very cranky girlfriend this morning, but I am sending Dave to work with food and two of Deb's Chocolate peanutbutter death bombs, which I think makes up for it.
Where does one check for the popularity of names?
There are all sorts of trends. Bible names. My grandmother and her sister were named Myrtle and Hazel--plant names. Beryl is a stone. Sometimes, I think a certain ethnicity influences the trend.
Yup. Flower names were big for a while, as well as stones (Pearl, Ruby), and Irish surnames were huge in the '80s and early '90s, I think. Names are fascinating.