So it is not a legit name. It's short for Lincoln, with a C stylized as a K. Like the band Korn.
ah ah ah ah
I have a friend who named his first daughter Tali.
A year or so had passed and one night at a dinner, I pointed out that he had named her after a character from Mass Effect.
His wife flipped her shit when she discovered that their child was named after a video game character.
He was not allowed to name their second born.
I didn't know that. Well then, the example in the OP is kinda bogus it seems.Which isn't an issue at all, because it's customary to have 2 first names in the Philippines anyway.
That reminds be, I always wanted to name my next dog after the GTA character Jack Howitzer. I'd call him Howie.I named my cat Street Fighter The Movie The Game The Cat (I call him street). I also named another cat Tekken but he met an unfortunate fate
Be glad I didn't have a child first.
The Wonder Years? If it's something super obvious, I don't get it.
Kevin is a common name in the US though. I wouldn't ever guess that someone named Kevin was named after Home Alone because there are a ton of Kevins here.Its the movie Home Alone.
It was super popular in Germany in the 90s and there were tons of kids named after that.
I thought it was popular in the states too.
So are people given the Johnathan who go by Jon not really called Jon? I don't mean to be rude, but your argument is nonsensical. Link is a real name. Stylizing a nickname doesn't invalidate the name. What's more, very very few words in the English language end with a C, but many end with a K. Altering the spelling of a nickname to look more standardized isn't an very good argument about the legitimacy of a name.
Here's another example: Alexandre Dumas was a novelist, he's called Alexandre Dumas the Father. His son, also named Alexandre Dumas, was a playwright, he's called Alexandre Dumas the Son. There was another Alexandre Dumas though, the novelist's father, a general who helped Napoleon invade Egypt, but he is called Alex Dumas, because he went by Alex. Do you believe he shouldn't rightly be known as a famous Alex?
A boy named Yoshi and a girl named Yuna ;-))
I always loved the name 'Rinoa' for a girl.
Kevin is a common name in the US though. I wouldn't ever guess that someone named Kevin was named after Home Alone because there are a ton of Kevins here.
Which isn't an issue at all, because it's customary to have 2 first names in the Philippines anyway.
No, it's not. I provided a source for a name that predates a famous fictional character by over 50 years when it was implied that the name wasn't legitimate because its most famous use was in naming said fictional character. The name is uncommon, yes, but it is a real name.My argument is: claiming a name is a real name, because 2 fictional characters and one musician (who stylized his nickname) is a stretch.
Until everyone calls her Rhino.
I learned something too. I would have never guessed that the popularity of Home Alone would have enfluenced anyone's child naming decisions but apparently it did.Ah, thank you for the information, thats interesting to know.
In Germany Kevin was a rather unpopular name, but it gained popularity dramatically during the 90s from that movie.
Today, though, nobody names their kid Kevin anymore. It has a pretty bad reputation.
Yeesh, that's tacky. I could see Gannon, as that's a real surname, being given as a middle name, but Ganondorf is made up gibberish so far as I can tell.I know someone who named her kid Ganon. I assumed it must have been an existing real name of some sort, since there was no other reason to think she was such a huge Zelda fan. Then one day I saw the kid's report card, and according to that his legal name is actually Ganondorf.
Nathan Drake is at least not so obvious, but I can't say the double first name thing isn't tacky.
Luigi and Mario are still real italian names. They're unique in that you can get away with it socially and you're still able to make a lot of jokes with it.I know a guy who named his son Luigi, he is Italian too.
Luigi and Mario are still real italian names. They're unique in that you can get away with it socially and you're still able to make a lot of jokes with it.
Until everyone calls her Rhino.
Doom Guy Richie
If it's two boys: Billy and Jimmy (Double Dragon)
I'm naming my son Urien
I'm naming my daughter that too
Jasmine James-Prather and Jeremy Brown of Martinsburg, W.Va., announce the birth of a son, Sephiroth Shinra Brown, May 7, 2011. Maternal grandparents are Miriam H. James and Ronald L. Prather. Paternal grandparents are Terry and Pam Brown of Bunker Hill, W.Va. Maternal great-grandparents are Barbara M. and Harry S. James.