Everly sounds like a girl's name, IMO.
| QUOTE (Zelle999 @ October 02, 2007 04:28 pm) |
| ONTD reports that Anthony Kiedes and his disturbingly young looking girlfriend have had a boy that they named Everly B. |
Is that some new kind of pig latin?
| QUOTE (Zelle999 @ October 02, 2007 02:28 pm) |
| Anthony Kiedis and his disturbingly young looking girlfriend |
I seem to remember from Us Weekly or something that the girlfriend is 20. And he's in his mid-forties. So not so much disturbingly young-looking as disturbingly young, period.
I think Everly is ok.
Maybe he wanted to name his kid after the Everly Brothers but couldn't remember their names (FTR: Don, and The Other One), so he just went with "Everly Brothers Kiedis."
ONTD said he's 44 and she's 22. Damn, half his age exactly.
I hope Everly is a very boyish boy, with that name, otherwise he's going to go through hell on the playground.
So, at age 65,
Nick Nolte is a father. It's an as yet unnamed baby girl, but since his son is named Brawley, we've got some high hopes for something off the wall.
Here's to hoping
he lets the mother groom the child.Considering the mother's name is "Clytie"...
Kim Raver named her second son Kipling - her older son is Luke, and they both have the last name Boyer (her husband's name is Manu Boyer). I kind of Kipling, but I'm not sure I love it with Boyer...
It says Kipling's first name is Leo. I love that name, since it was my great-grandfather's. :)
| QUOTE (dinahmoe @ October 02, 2007 09:37 pm) |
| Maybe he wanted to name his kid after the Everly Brothers but couldn't remember their names (FTR: Don, and The Other One), so he just went with "Everly Brothers Kiedis." |
This sounds scarily likely.
I like Leo Boyer, but "Kipling Boyer" sounds like a pharmaceutical company. Or a law firm.
I kind of love Kipling. There's a character in one of my stories named Kipling....
MMM Mr. Kipling's Mince Pies
OMG I'm watching a design show on HGTV and one of the designers is named "Chayse Dacoda." Oh I'm so sure. Ew.
That looks like someone threw up a bunch of consonants and vowels and formed a name out of them. I hate deliberate changes to ordinary names. Yesterday, I had to check an entire family's library card accounts at work for the mother of the family, and when she listed off her child's name as "James" I looked and found nothing, so I asked, "Is he maybe listed under "Jamie" or "Jim"?" To which I get a snotty look and the reply, "James is a girl, and it's spelled Jaymes." Ooookay. And why would you expect anyone to know this?