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Name Help, Need a certain type of name? Ask. |
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nome |
Jul 28 2003, 08:43 PM
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Queen of the Bowling Alley
Group: Betas
Posts: 893
Joined: 5-November 02
From: San Diego, California, USA
Member No.: 8
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If people want to start gathering names for incidental characters, but can't think of enough middle class American/ancient greek/sixteenth century irish/whatever names, they can post here for suggestions.
For example, if anyone would like to help my extreme name-related incompetence, what is the most classic ninteenth-century-esque English uppercrust name you can think of? (first, last, both, whatever) I'd be immensely grateful for anything you can think up, as I try to pick names to really fit certain characters.
Nome
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"Man is the only animal that blushes. Or needs to." - Mark Twain Nome's LJ
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Guest_percival |
Jul 29 2003, 08:55 AM
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Unregistered
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Georgette Heyer and Regency romances tend to use Romn inspired names, such as Horatia or Minerva. Actually, Horatia sounds as stuffy as it gets to me
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Aibhinn |
Jul 29 2003, 09:45 PM
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Through the mirror
Group: Members
Posts: 6
Joined: 4-April 03
Member No.: 1,138
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Hyphenated names seem to sound awfully stuffy upper-crust. E.g. Sir Nicolas de Mimsy-Porpington, aka "Nearly Headless Nick," and a character in a mystery I recently read, "Peregrine Foggington-Smythe."
Aibhinn
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Someday I'd like to stand on the moon, Look through 240,000 miles of space, And say, "There certainly is a beautiful Earth out tonight."
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Imogen |
Jul 31 2003, 09:33 AM
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On a mission with a pen
Group: Admin
Posts: 1,591
Joined: 5-November 02
From: England's Green and Pleasant Land
Member No.: 4
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Would names like 'Felicity' fit in with that time period, Percival? I'll ponder over it this morning and see what else I can think of. Imogen
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After her O.W.L.s Hope had managed to persuade her dad to give her a crash course in what he laughingly referred to as “Parseltongue for tourists”. Being in Slytherin, she’d thought it had been the epitome of cool to return to school with such useful snakey phrases as “Can you pass the apple pie, please?” and “Would you be good enough to tell me what time the train to Madrid departs from Platform Two?” . ~ A Pensieve Affair ~ Now being posted...
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Imogen |
Jul 31 2003, 01:47 PM
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On a mission with a pen
Group: Admin
Posts: 1,591
Joined: 5-November 02
From: England's Green and Pleasant Land
Member No.: 4
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Penelope
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After her O.W.L.s Hope had managed to persuade her dad to give her a crash course in what he laughingly referred to as “Parseltongue for tourists”. Being in Slytherin, she’d thought it had been the epitome of cool to return to school with such useful snakey phrases as “Can you pass the apple pie, please?” and “Would you be good enough to tell me what time the train to Madrid departs from Platform Two?” . ~ A Pensieve Affair ~ Now being posted...
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Shimmer |
Aug 7 2003, 06:27 PM
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Stealing socks
Group: Members
Posts: 48
Joined: 11-November 02
Member No.: 52
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Another good name website is Here. It lets you search for names by the meaning of them, which is quite useful! Since some of my characters are Selkies, I searched for Water, Sea, etc, and came up with some good ones! Oh and does anyone know some traditional Irish names and last names? Thanks! Shimmer
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"I give myself very good advice...but I very seldom follow it" -Alice in Wonderland Leaving , a novel in progress...(key word, progress.)
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rdehwyll |
Aug 7 2003, 07:07 PM
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Incessant Writer and Reader
Group: Readers
Posts: 56
Joined: 26-July 03
From: Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, USA
Member No.: 1,561
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Surnames and where to find them --
My favorite place to look for names is a Phone Book. Try your local library -- they may have phone books for other states (in America), and even foreign countries. (My local Library has them for London, Paris, Moscow, several hundred others, plus almost every city of 50,000 residents or more in the US)
There are also similar listings online -- try a google search for Phone Numbers, then use the browse function to run through the lists.
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Robert Waldbauer
Writing is incredibly easy -- one just stares hard at the blank piece of paper until droplets of blood form on ones brow...
Life Instructor and History Maven by trade
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rdehwyll |
Aug 7 2003, 07:18 PM
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Incessant Writer and Reader
Group: Readers
Posts: 56
Joined: 26-July 03
From: Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, USA
Member No.: 1,561
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Irish Names: Given names can be found here Irish NamesSurnames can be found here Irish Surnameshttp
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Robert Waldbauer
Writing is incredibly easy -- one just stares hard at the blank piece of paper until droplets of blood form on ones brow...
Life Instructor and History Maven by trade
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