You need to think about a name before you give it to your character.
http://www.chitrasoundar.com/blog/2013/01/28/choosing-character-names/
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Blog: Just the Facts, Ma'am (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Utah Children's Writers (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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You have to check out this site!
Fake Name Generator
I know you've seen many sites to help generate names. I personally have used baby name sites. This one is much more than just names.
Fake Name Generator give EVERYTHING you'll need for your new character. Here's a random character I tried:
Donna R. Hegwood
White Plains, NY 10601
Phone: 914-394-5878
Website: RaspberryNectar.com
Email Address: DonnaRHegwood@teleworm.us
Username: Hadet1993
Password: Neingah2ooc
Mother's Maiden name: Moor
Birthday: May 6, 1993 (19 years old)
Visa: 4539 2374 1084 0342
Expires:12/2013
CVV: 506
SSN: 084-32-2754
Occupation: Rancher
Company: Budget Tapes & Records
Vehicle: 2004 Suzuki Swift
UPS Tracking Number: 1Z 94A 854 46 7847 142 5
Blood type: O+
Weight: 166.3 pounds (75.6 kilograms)
Height: 5' 6" (167 centimeters)
Can you believe it? With one or two clicks you get everything from a name to a website to blood type. Crazy! It's fun to play with :) You can put in different countries and nationalities too.
Blog: Kid Lit Reviews (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: 3stars, Children's Books, Library Donated Books, acceptance, children's book, curiosity, girls, identity, names, namesakes, Rachel Levy Lessr, shadows, Sunny Lee, Add a tag
3 Stars My Name is Rebecca Romm, Named after My Mother’s Mom Rachel Levy Lesser No. Pages: 32 Ages: 4 to 8 …………… …………………. Back Cover: Rebecca Elizabeth Romm was named after her late grandmother Rebecca. She is annoyed when everyone compares her to her mother’s mom, because all she wants is a name of [...]
Blog: Just the Facts, Ma'am (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Some tips for choosing appropriate names for your characters.
http://mysterywritingismurder.blogspot.com/2012/08/whats-in-name-naming-your.html
Blog: Just the Facts, Ma'am (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Some things to think about when you're naming your characters.
http://www.jeffcarney.net/blog/?p=120
Blog: Just the Facts, Ma'am (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Search the social security database for popular first names by year of birth.
Blog: Life, Love, and the Pursuit of Publication (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Today's post is dedicated to my name. My mom had special reasons for both my first and middle names.
Raenice. My mom wanted to give me a name that would give me the nickname, Rae. In her mind, she saw me as an adult; a businesswoman. She said she imagined a room full of men waiting for a businessman named Ray to make an appearance in the meeting, but in walks this sexy businesswoman named Rae. The men's mouths would hang open and they'd all be enamored by my beauty and sexiness. I see where I got my imagination from. I'm so gonna use this set up in a romance novel sometime in the future. Anyway, so her middle name is Denise. Add Rae to the last part of her middle name and you get Raenice (pronounced "Rae-niece"). My name is actually spelled Rae'Nice, but I don't use the hyphen. Maybe I'll use it when I'm a best-selling author. Hmm...
Beatrice. This one is not as "glamorous" as my first name, but it's just as important. I was named after my great grandmother, GaGa, who died seven months before I was born. Remember, she's the one who saved my life when I was a baby. If you didn't read the story, you can read it here.
I love names that mean something. Since Raenice is made up, it doesn't really have an official meaning. I say it means "unique" cos it's not a common name. Beatrice means "voyager of life" and "blessed" (source). It also means "she who makes happy" and "she who brings happiness" (source).
So there you go. Raenice Beatrice. A unique voyager of life, who's happy, blessed and brings happiness to those around her. Yep. That's me.
I love my name.
Blog: Just the Facts, Ma'am (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Here's some great advice about naming characters and other nouns in your world-built novel.
http://www.dailywritingtips.com/how-to-invent-names-for-your-genre-novel/
Blog: An Awfully Big Blog Adventure (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: characters, Linda Strachan, Paeony Lewis, Shakespeare, Names, Add a tag
It may have caused havoc for the star crossed lovers, but as Shakespeare's Juliet famously said -
"What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet."
What does your name say about you? Does the person become the name or does the name mould the person?
In the Johnny Cash hit song 'A boy Named Sue' the main character's father named him 'Sue' to make him tough...How often have you heard a name that conjures up an image even before you meet the person? Is there a Sandra or a Melanie, a Kevin or a Jack who comes to mind when you hear the name, reminding you of a positive, or much worse, a negative experience?
Very occasionally I meet someone whose name just doesn't seem to fit them.
I know someone whose name is Bill, but every time I see him the name Paul comes into my head. I have no idea why, he just looks as if he should be called Paul.
It's not something that has happened often, but again recently I met a teacher in a school whose name didn't seem to suit her, either. The name just didn't fit the person I saw, and I had a bit of a problem remembering her name because of it.
Perhaps it is just me, but has this ever happened to you?
How important is the name you choose for your child?
It is a badge they will likely wear for most of their lives but have little choice in themselves.
Baby names often vary with the times, with children named after popular TV series characters who are long forgotten, or celebrities who are no longer famous by the time the child is entering high school.
Then there are those bizarre spellings, a real pitfall for any author at a book signing!
Choosing a name for your characters involves thinking about lots of different things and it throws up a few possible plot ideas, too.
- Is it a name that reflects their age, their background, their personal
12 Comments on What's in a name? - Linda Strachan, last added: 2/18/2012Display Comments Add a Comment
Blog: Alicerene's Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Becoming Alice, Culture, Identity, Courage, Dating oneself, Names, Styles, Add a tag
Last night I went to a meeting of a book club which I have been invited to join. I have known some of its members, but not all. In being introduced, I learned that there is another woman in the group whose name is Alice. My head bobbed back a bit in surprise. Alice! Nobody I know, or have ever known, has been named Alice.
The lady I met was as shocked as I to meet another Alice. Well of course there are others: Alice Roosevelt, the daughter of President Theodore Roosevelt, Alice B. Toklas, member of the Parisian avant-garde of the early twentieth century, or Alice Paul, associated with furthering the suffrage movement for women, to name a few. The one thing we have in common is that we all are of a certain age and older.
It makes one realize that names are fashions of an era, just like the clothes we wear, the music to which we listen, the art we admire, the way we raise our kids, the values we hold, and the list goes on.
In my day girls had names like Nancy, Barbara, Elaine, Patricia, or Anne. Fast forward a couple of decades and you get names like Linda, Laura, Bonnie, Sue, or Kathy. Fast forward again to the names of today’s kids and you get Ashley, Laura, Bridget, and Emma.
As you probably read in Becoming Alice, I actually chose the name of Alice for myself. What was I thinking? I wasn’t. I chose it because my brother was dating a girl named Alys. In today’s world that name would be Allison. I don’t fit that name.
Most people don’t ever veer from choosing the names of the time for their babies. That’s why I have so much admiration for the young couple I know who had the courage to name their son Oscar.
Filed under: Becoming Alice, Culture, Identity Tagged: Courage, Dating oneself, Names, Styles
Blog: The Poisoned Apple (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: In the Broken Birdcage of Kathleen Fair, Ghosts, Time Travel, The Ghosts of Folding Time, Names, Add a tag
I am so in love with the title of my new story that I can't stop whispering it. This of course does not make for a productive writer, thus I am currently 654 words into In the Broken Birdcage of Kathleen Fair. I couldn't get the story plan to sit right until I found my main character's name, we ran the gamut from Gina to Erica to Erin (okay, not much of a gamut), but none of them fitted and then we came upon the name Kathleen and she is of course very, very fair.
In other news, I may just, eventually, maybe, you never know sit down and finish my ghostly time travel saga 'The Ghosts of Folding Time' which I started writing last November. I mean, we have an entire first draft and part of a second draft and a whole heap of madness. And then of course there are a bunch of grandfathers to deal with. In the meantime though, I should head downstairs and continue babysitting and watching Alvin and the Chipmunks for the hundredth time this weekend.
Blog: Steve Draws Stuff (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I’m a terrible promoter.
I really am.
The problem isn’t that I’m lazy, or that I don’t put forth the effort, or that I’m unwilling to put in the time. It’s none of that stuff.
I’m actually not the least bit lazy, my effort-abilities are second to none and I have nothing but time on my hands.
The actual issue is that my personal persona and my business persona get mixed up a lot. A whole lot, actually.
I say stuff I shouldn’t. I put things out there that I should have locked a safe, wrapped in a chain and tossed into the ocean.
As much as it pains me to admit, I’m an idiot.
The fact that I’m writing these very words at this very moment proves I’m an absolute dolt and that I’ll never learn.
Do the followers on Twitter that are interested in my YA novel or my artwork really need to know that I spent the night bent over the toilet due to a nasty bout of food poisoning? Probably not.
Did I tell them? Yep.
Was it necessary to let them know that because of it I spent the entire next day breaking wind like Chris Brown breaks ladies’ faces? Most definitely not.
Was that Chris Brown joke a massive mistake?
You better believe it.
I’m a goof-ball and I don’t know when to stop.
I spend so much time cracking wise and making you feel uncomfortable with awkward-delicious nuggets about my personal life that I sometimes forget I’m trying to sell you something.
Then the bill collectors come calling. Then my wife shakes her head and I pull out the lining of my pockets and shrug my shoulders. Then she hops on-line and types the words “divorce attorney” into Google.
It’s a vicious cycle.
So how do I plan on solving this little problem of mine?
I have to get serious. I have to get more professional.
I’ll need a briefcase of some sort . Maybe some papers to put in it.
Wait, wait, wait - maybe I don’t need the papers at all. I mean, what are the chances anyone will actually ask to see what’s inside, right?
Combing my hair, putting on a suit and brushing my teeth more than once every other day just isn’t going to cut it anymore. It’s not enough. I have to take things to the next level. I’m going to have to make some drastic lifestyle changes.
I’ll need to straighten that hunch in my back and smear that sloppy-creepy grin off my face.
Maybe I’ll even shave.
I’ll have to mind my P’s and Q’s while making sure my F’s and U’s are never allowed in the same sentence together.
I’ll need to be better than the sum of my parts and better than the sum of the sum of those parts.
I’ll have to blog about books and writing, and the writing process and the process of writing.
Speaking of my blog, I’ll need to maintain it a bit more diligently. I guess I should watch that I don’t accept a friend request from anyone and everyone on Facebook. I should also try and make sure current and prospective clients don’t catch wind of my uncontrollable post-puke wind breaking in one of my many unnecessary status updates.
Breath mints will be important.
New shoes too. New shoes are a given. Shoes are the first thing people look at. I heard that somewhere.
No more gobbling on burgers so stuffed with goop the juices leave stains on my shirts. Nope – gonna have to put the kibosh on that one.
I’ll need some new shirts as well.
Maybe I should change my name? It might be smart to change it to something a little more professional sounding.
Max Hardcopy?
How about, Patrick Gitstuffdun?
No, wait…Stephen Nowack.
No one commands respect like a Nowack.
Or maybe I shouldn’t do any of this nonsense.
Stephen Nowack? Seriously? That’s just silly.
Breath mints? That’s even sil
Blog: Bugs and Bunnies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Today is Wednesday, in the first full week of March. Which makes it part of Celebrate Your Name Week. And the Wednesday of Celebrate Your Name Week is designated as Learn What Your Name Means Day.
So.
I did a web search: What does the name Kimberly mean? Because that's my full first name. (Usually, though, people just call me Kim. Except for my grandmas, and my aunts and uncles, and my brother and his family, and my husband. They all call me Kimmy. Probably more than you wanted to know, but there it is.)
So, anyway. Kimberly. I looked up the meaning, and this is what I found:
- From the wood of the royal forest
- From the royal fortress meadow
- Meadow of the royal fort
- Ruler
- Cyneburg's field
- Leader of the warriors
So, from now on - or at least for today - you may refer to me as:
It has a nice ring to it, don't you think?
What does your name mean?
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: hamlet, irish, language, lisa collinson, names, norse, review of english studies, Scandinavia, shakespeare, amlethus, nordic, ‘hamlet, hostel’, derga’s, collinson, Add a tag
By Lisa Collinson
‘Few etymologies are perfect. Neither is this one. Yet it may be right.’
So wrote the eminent scholar Anatoly Liberman in 2007, in a beautifully-crafted OUPblog post entitled ‘Hamlet and Other Lads and Lasses: Or, From Rags to Riches’. That post explored the origins of the name of Shakespeare’s Prince of Denmark, and – with wonderful spark and spirit – revived an old theory that ‘Am-lothi … is the correct division [of the name], with Am- and loth- being related to Engl. em(ber), and lad respectively (-i is an ending).’ The name ‘ember boy’ as a whole was, Liberman noted, suggestive of ‘a despised third son of fairy tales, known in British folklore as Boots.’
This wholly Germanic etymology may, indeed, be right. But, in an article published online last week in the OUP journal Review of English Studies, I have set out my own – no doubt even less perfect – theory, which I hope will be of as much interest to artists of various kinds as to scholarly specialists.
In this new article, I conclude that Hamlet probably came ultimately from Gaelic Admlithi: a name attached to a player (or ‘mocker’) in a strange and violent medieval Irish tale known in English as ‘The Destruction of Da Derga’s Hostel’. If I’m right, this means that some version of the Hamlet-name was associated with players hundreds of years before Shakespeare lived or wrote.
What does Admlithi mean? It has proved tough to translate – particularly for me, as a specialist in Old Norse, rather than Gaelic. But once I’d found the name (sent to me years ago by a friend who knew I had an interest in medieval player-figures), it was impossible to let go. Partly, this had to do with the fact that it clearly had something to do with the concept of grinding, which I knew was a key element in two important early Nordic ‘Hamlet’ texts; but which also seemed to have plenty of powerful cultural potential of its own. (Just think of the range of its contemporary connotations!) In the end, I plumped for not one but three weird-yet-interesting interpretations of Admlithi: Great Grindings; Greatly Ground (plural); Due-To-Be-Greatly Ground.
But what did these really mean, in the Middle Ages? To Gaelic-speakers? To Norse-speakers? To people who spoke bits of both languages?
Once I started asking these questions in earnest, one of the answers I found was that yes, Gaelic words connected with grinding probably did (as we might guess) suggest violence, or sexual activity. But they could also imply low or ambiguous social status: sometimes linked to gender, sometimes to categorization as a ‘fool’ of some kind. In other words, use of the peculiar name Admlithi – grammatically hazy, yet bursting with meaning – could probably have said more about the character tagged with it than lines and lines of straightforward description. Just as well, in fact, for Admlithi has scarcely been mentioned in surviving versions of ‘Da Derga’s Hostel’ before he’s gone – out of the picture entirely.
So … Was this Irish player, Admlithi, Hamlet?
No!
Hamlet is Hamlet!
But, as I discuss in the RES article, I do think there is a fair possibility that Gaelic Admlithi was known as a player-name in medieval Scandinavia, and that this somehow contributed to the development of a riddling figure called Amlethus, long identified as an early version of the
Blog: Pam Bachorz (YA Author) (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I take naming my characters very seriously. There isn't a single character in my books that doesn't have a name of significance. Sometimes readers can pick up on why I chose that name--but other times it's a private meaning, just a touchstone for me.
A few examples:
--In my upcoming book, DROUGHT, the main character's name is Ruby. I chose that name for a number of reasons. First, rubies are a precious stone, and Ruby is precious to the Congregation that is her family. Even though most of them don't know it, her blood sustains their lives. I also liked naming this character after a gemstone that needs cutting, polishing, to be made beautiful--because Ruby will have to go through transformations before she reaches her potential too. And then there's the most obvious reason: rubies are red. So is blood.
--But the main character in my first book, CANDOR, got his name--Oscar--quite differently. In the first draft of CANDOR, he wasn't the son of the town founder. Heck, he wasn't even the main character. No. He was the son of the school custodian. He had the bad luck to be named Oscar, which meant he had to deal with a lot of kids teasing him--the custodian's kid living in a trash can just like Oscar the Grouch, etc. That gave him a chip on his shoulder. It's one of the few characteristics that survived as he evolved into the rich, smooth main character with big secrets. Somehow, I couldn't bear to change his name. I figured it sounded fancy, like a boy born into privilege. Besides, he wouldn't let me call him anything else.
--I won't reveal any of the names in my new book, since it's still just a little baby idea and these things DO change, but I will share a few of my favorite places to research names:
- US Census Records. If I'm writing about teens in 2015, then I like to check their birth years to see which names were most popular then. Some characters should get very popular names, and others the most obscure.
- Baby name books--a favorite writers' tool. My go-to book is titled THE BEST BABY NAME BOOK IN THE WHOLE WORLD, by Bruce Lansky.
- Graveyards records and landholder records--some you can find via Google while others you will only find at your local research library. I chose some of the last names in DROUGHT (Pelling, Prosser, Schuyler) from common property holder names in upstate New York.
Happy character naming!
Add a CommentBlog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: A-Featured, Early Bird, History, Reference, UK, 1066, britain, French, name origin, names, Norman Conquest, William the Conqueror, frankish, normans, borne, norman, bernard, hardy, Add a tag
I couldn’t help noticing this story, which states that many of the names still popular in English-speaking countries originate from the Normans, who won control of England in 1066. Meanwhile, names that were popular in England at the time – such as Aethelred, Eadric, and Leofric – have disappeared. With that in mind, I turned to Babies’ Names, by Patrick Hanks and Kate Hardcastle, to find out more about Norman names. Below are a selection, along with their meanings.
Adele This was borne by a 7th-century saint, a daughter if the Frankish King Dagobert II. It was also the name of William the Conqueror’s youngest daughter (c. 1062-1137), who became the wife of Stephen of Blois. The name went out of use in England in the later Middle Ages, and was revived in the 19th century. It is the stage name of English singer-songwriter Laurie Blue Atkins (b. 1988).
Alison From a very common medieval name, a Norman French diminutive of Alice. It virtually died out in England in the 15th century, but survived in Scotland, with the result that until its revival in England in the 20th century it had a strongly Scottish flavour. The usual spelling in North America is Allison.
Bernard Norman and Old French name of Germanic (Frankish) origin, meaning ‘bear-hardy’. This was borne by three famous medieval churchmen: St Bernard of Menthon (923-1008), founder of a hospice on each of the Alpine passes named after himl; the monastic reformer St Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153); and the scholastic philosopher Bernard of Chartres.
Emma Old French name, of Germanic (Frankish) origin, originally a short form of compound names such as Ermintrude, containing the word erm(en), irm(en) ‘entire’. It was adopted by the Normans and introduced by them to Britain. Its popularity in medieval England was greatly enhanced by the fact that it had been borne by the mother of Edward the Confessor, herself a Norman.
Hugh From an Old French name, Hugues, of Germanic (Frankish) origin derived from hug ‘heart’, ‘mind’, ’spirit’. It was originally a short form of various compound names containing this element. This was borne by the aristocracy of medieval France, adopted by the Normans, and introduced by them to Britain.
Leonard From an Old French personal name of Germanic origin, derived from leon ‘lion’ + hard ‘hardy’, ‘brave’, ’strong’. This was the name of a 5th-century Frankish saint, the patron of peasants and horses. Although it was introduced into Britain by the Normans, Leonard was not a particularly common name during the Middle Ages. It was revived in the 19th century and became very popular. The spelling Lennard is also found.
Rosalind From an Old French personal name of Germanic (Frankish) origin, from hros ‘horse’ + lind ‘weak’, ‘tender’, ’soft’. It was adopted by the Normans and introduced by them to Britain. Its popularity as a given name owes much to its use by Edmund Spenser for the character of a shepherdess in his pastoral poetry, and by Shakespeare as the name of the heroine in As You Like It.
William Probably the most successful of all the Old French names of Germanic origin that were introduced to England by the Normans. It is derived from Germanic wil ‘will’, ‘desire’ + helm ‘helmet’, ‘protection’. The fact that it was borne by the Conqueror himself does not seem to have inhibited its favour with
Blog: Musings of a Novelista (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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During this latest revision phase, I’ve had some interesting things happen. I’m really getting to “know” my characters since I spent a lot of time with them this past week.
During this time, I came to this conclusion about my protagonist: She had the wrong name.
A character’s name says a lot about them. A character named Elizah Coolidge may elicit a different reaction than say a character named Suzie Beach. You may even want your character’s name to have a literal meaning correlating to your theme or to your character’s main goal or revelation. As a writer, it’s up to you to find the perfect name match.
This novel has been through several incarnations. But through each one, my main character’s name has stayed the same. However, I’ve learned some new things about her and I realized that her name no longer fit her personality.
Her new name really works for her! I think she likes it too because now she’s been telling me some things that she wants to do and she’s been helping figure out some scenes — even giving me ideas for new scenes.
Only writers will be able to read this post and not think I’m a lunatic. Talking about a character as if she is a real person.
But that’s what you want to do in your writing. You want to get know your characters so much that they do become real people. Even down to the right choice for their name.
How do you pick your character’s name? Do the names ever change during the course of your novel?
Blog: One Question A Day (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Answers, proud, haircuts, IT Girl, prom, Senior Prom, names, invisible, Add a tag
There’s this thing I can’t let go of. It’s this comparison of me to this girl I’ll never be. The IT Girl that everyone wants to be friends with, the one who isn’t invisible.
Every morning I put on my Arizona jeans and know they aren’t the True Religions she would wear. And every time I curl my eyelashes I wonder what’s the point as they’re scrawny and clumpy when I coat them with Extralash Maybelline and know hers would be longer, lusher much prettier coated in beautiful, shiny mascara by Mac. And the worst part? Every time I get a crush on a guy, usually an IT Guy, I know she would know the perfect thing to say because Mr. IT would not only see her, unlike myself, but she’d know how to speak his language. The language if IT.
It’s like I have this curse on me that makes me invisible and I’ve been spending all of high school trying to find a cure. No matter what I’ve done in the nearly four years I’ve gone to Blossom Hill High School my IT factor never changes, my invisibility factor remains the only steady, constant in my life. You might want to know why I want IT so bad. Why can’t I just be happy without IT and hang out with my brigade of friends who are equally invisible. There’s two reasons really. The first, besides the fact that I don’t really fit in with them either as they are all in band and I’m not, is because everyone, even the invisible want to feel special in some way. And the second is because I love, or I should say used to love, a challenge. But the real, deep down reason? I decided when I was a Freshman that I didn’t want to sit home, all alone on Senior Prom Night. If that ever happened I’d be invisible for a lifetime.
Two weeks before Senior Prom I gave IT up. When I knew no one would ever ask me. That was the day I went to Aunty Anne’s House of Beauty and asked her to cut my hair in this super-super, short cut and everything changed.
Afterward, when the floor was covered in huge mounds of wiry, auburn fluff, Aunty Anne said, “Abagail, your eyes, they’re, they’re beautiful.” She smiled just like me, the kind of smile like looks like a “v” with kind of crooked teeth we have down low and hide pretty well because only our top ones show.
All I thought about at the time was how much I hated the name Abagail but not as much as Abby, which is what everybody called me and I just knew that the she-I-wanted-to-be would have some way-more exotic name like Cassandra or Veronica and then my Aunt said it again.
“Your eyes are beautiful.” With tears in her own.
I hugged her and thanked her even though I pulled my hoodie up over my head first chance I got when I was out of her sight, waving from her shop window, on my walk home. I ducked my head down. But as I walked through town it was like a hurricane blew around the corner of Garfield and Lincoln, my hoodie flew off and what was left of my hair couldn’t flop in the breeze and I stood face-to-face with Troy Randall. An IT boy. THE IT boy. And his eyes went wide with what I thought was horror at the sight of my hair but when the whirlwind stopped he said, “Abby?”
I just nodded and words wouldn’t leave my lips. IT happened. It finally happened. An IT guy, THE IT guy I had a crush on ever since we worked side-by-side in the middle school kitchen in seventh grade in our cooking class baking pretzels together and I over salted every one, saw me, the invisible one. Troy even made my name sound good. I froze. He’d just left Froman’s Drug Store and I
Blog: pambachorz (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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When I first signed on with agent Elana, I asked her whether my last name was going to be a problem. I mean, let's face it, I'm not luck enough to have a short forceful name, ala John Green, or something alliterative, like Gail Giles. I've got a mess of vowels and consonants in my last name that nobody really knows how to deal with. Heck, I even have an uncle who, after a trip to Europe, announced that he was going to pronounce it different from the rest of us, having consulted with the good European people about how it should be pronounced.
But authors like Zusak, Levithan, and Pfeffer give me hope, and I'm sticking with the name I was born into.
The best way I've found to explain the pronouciation is this: It's BAY-shores, plural, like shores of the bay. I explained it that way to my future husband, when I met him at the college paper, and he teased me for months--"hey, Pam Shores-of-the-Bay!". But maybe that was just because I was so skilled with the one-pica tape and he was trying to get my attention.
So, with apologies to the Tink TInks:
They call me 'BACH-oars'
They call me 'Ba-SHORES'
They call me 'BACH-oose'
They call me 'BAY-shore'
That's not my name
That's not my name
That's not my name
That's not my name
They call me 'BUH-shores'
But I'm not that
Bach-Buh-Bas
Always the same
That's not my name
That's not my name
That's not my name
That's not my name
Blog: Time Machine, Three Trips: Where Would You Go? (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: silly, People, names, Humor, Add a tag
Have you ever known anyone with a silly name? I know several people with silly names. Here are a few. These are real names of people I know.
- Jerry Derryberry
- Justin Case ( Just in case)
- Lou Sir (loser)
- Harry Butts
- Mr. Pehole
- Mr. Dicky
- Race Carr
- Dr. Love
- Alpha Omega
- Icie Glove
- Bunny Hop
- Kanoe Waters
- Daisy Flowers
- Chow Maine
- River Fish
Blog: Time Machine, Three Trips: Where Would You Go? (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Humor, names, People, silly, Add a tag
Have you ever known anyone with a silly name? I know several people with silly names. Here are a few. These are real names of people I know.
- Jerry Derryberry
- Justin Case ( Just in case)
- Lou Sir (loser)
- Harry Butts
- Mr. Pehole
- Mr. Dicky
- Race Carr
- Dr. Love
- Alpha Omega
- Icie Glove
- Bunny Hop
- Kanoe Waters
- Daisy Flowers
- Chow Maine
- River Fish
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: A-Featured, Leisure, Music, Reference, Joyce Bourne, names, opera, quiz, Who Married Figaro, Who, Married, Figaro, Joyce, Bourne, characters, Add a tag
Megan Branch, Intern
Operas are always full of intrigue, suspense, drama, romance—and characters with really great names like Figaro, Egisto, and Gorislava. In Who Married Figaro? A Book of Opera Characters, Joyce Bourne, co-author of the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music, has written over 2,500 entries about the people behind all of those funny-sounding names. Here’s a quiz about some of opera’s figures. Go ahead and see if you can get all the answers right in the comments. Be sure to check back tomorrow for the answers.
1. The clockmaker’s wife hid her many lovers inside of clocks to conceal them from her husband, Torquemada.
2. This earth goddess, mother of twelve, only leaves the earth to deal with disaster.
3. This very special bird has the job of warning Tsar Dodon of enemies.
4. The title character from the Britten opera that incorporates an audience sing-along and a well-known story from the Bible.
5. This character, from Puccini’s La Rondine, was a palm reader in love with a maid.
6. Gershwin’s seller of ‘happy-dust’ in Porgy and Bess.
7. Mozart’s Roman emperor who didn’t want to seem like a dictator.
8. The magician who helped to smooth over relationship complications in Handel’s Orlando.
9. This inventor made the mechanical doll that Hoffmann fell in love with in Offenbach’s Les Contes d’Hoffmann.
10. This ‘shadowy’ character was the devil in disguise, stole a soul after a lost game of cards and his signature aria is “I burn! I freeze!”.
Blog: OUPblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: A-Featured, Music, Reference, Joyce Bourne, names, opera, quiz, Who Married Figaro, Joyce, Bourne, Who, Married, Figaro, characters, Add a tag
Megan Branch, Intern
Operas are always full of intrigue, suspense, drama, romance—and characters with really great names like Figaro, Egisto, and Gorislava. In Who Married Figaro? A Book of Opera Characters, Joyce Bourne, co-author of the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music, has written over 2,500 entries about the people behind all of those funny-sounding names. Yesterday, we posted a quiz about some of opera’s figures. The answers are below. How did you do?
1. Concepción,from Ravel’s L’Heure Espagnole, would invite her lovers over while Torquemada was out of the house and suggest that “they hide in large clocks and when he finds them she passes them off as customers.”
2. Erda, featured in the Wagner operas Das Rheingold and Siegfried, was the mother of three Norns and nine Valkyries. “She rises from the earth only when she sees impending disaster.”
3. The Golden Cockerel from Rimsky-Korsakov’s play of the same name was only a fair-weather friend of the Tsar: the Cockerel “later pecks him on the head and kills him.”
4. Noye, from Noye’s Fludde, was the father of Sem, Ham, and Jaffett. Noye was told by God to “build an ark in which all his family and animals ride out the storm.” Noye’s Fludde also incorporates hymns sung by the audience.
5. Prunier “reads Magda’s hand and tells her that she may, like the swallow (la rondine) find a bright future, but there is also tragedy in store. Prunier is secretly in love with Magda’s maid Lisette.
6. Sportin’ Life sold dope to Bess “and, under its influence, she leaves for New York while Porgy is being questioned by the police.”
7. Tito Vespasiano,from La Clemenza di Tito, was “anxious that his people see him not as a dictator but as a clement ruler.”
8. Zoroastro “resolves the complications of the relationships between Orlando and his former love Angelica.”
9. Spalanzani invented the doll, Olympia, with whom Hoffmann later fell in love.
10. Nick Shadow from Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress took Tom Rakewell away from his fiancé, Anne, and led him “to a life of debauchery. When all Tom’s money is gone, they play cards” for Tom’s soul. Tom wins and “in anger Shadow condemns him to a life of insanity.”
Blog: SusanWrites (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: names, Add a tag
I woke up when Cassie woke up this morning but it wasn't my turn to get out of bed. So I closed my eyes and started thinking about names. I have a lot of things that need names right now. So those of you that are good at naming things, please leave me lots of suggestions in the comments. :) Thanks.
1. My new netbook needs a name. I've never named my computers before but I want to start. The netbook is blue and is my after hours and traveling buddy. He likes steak and potatoes and chocolate. He's very impulsive and never stops to read directions before he puts something together.
2. My new laptop (won't be here until next week) needs a name too. It's an apple green workhorse that will be my main computer for everything. She's a dedicated over-achiever always willing to work late for no extra pay. She's a bit on the shy side and goes barefoot all the time.
3. I was even thinking about giving my office a name. I guess now that I'm spending more time in here (6 hours a day so far) I think we ought to move to a first name basis. It's got a cozy, garden cottage sort of feel to it and I smile every time I walk in there.
4. Plant Kid's story needs a name. I'm not stopping the work on Flyboy but Plant Kid is there, tugging at the edge of my mind and the hardest thing for me to tell him is that I have no title for him. I can't start a book without a title. No, really I can't. It's a story about a kid who doesn't have much of a family so he makes his own. Oh, and it's about plants. And about how some things you want to fix can't ever be fixed and sometimes that's a good thing.
5. This blog needs a name. No, I'm not leaving Livejournal but I want to buy a domain name, set up a shell of a website, and then put the blog front and center. From there I can add things that will build around the focus of this blog which will still be about me but hopefully more bits about inspiration, persistence, and motivation for writers.
The floor is open. ;)
Blog: Dawn Bonnevie (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: names, Add a tag
I've posted before that I think names are fun to think about.
Sometimes names have interesting meanings.
So, I am reading A Whole Nother Story (very funny, by the way).
Names are a big part of this story. If you read the book, you'll see what I mean.
This book inspired me to have a little fun with names today.
Can you tell what all these names have in common?
Megan Trump
Bella Ursa Tate
Lilly Olive Long
Quinn Thompson
Opal Marie Good
Beth Fran Ford
Ben Brett Quigley
Owen Johnson
Isaac Caleb Umpire
Check out the pictures below to see the answers.
(their initials all say/ mean something :)
You can click on a picture to see it larger.
Do YOUR initials say something?
Do some artwork with your name!
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How cool is that? I have not found a name I can live with for the MC in my newest project. I went to the site and now have several possiibles. Thanks.