Published
just had a unique baby name the other week....thought i'd share, and hope to continue this thread from earlier.... "strange baby names":
strawberry :roll (thank goodness this was changed by the adoptive parents)
~jennifer:chair:
admin note: edited to add links to the first two threads:
https://allnurses.com/ob-gyn-nursing/whats-the-weirdest-16017.html
Oh, so the request was to just shut this one down and start anew? That wouldn't be bad. Of course, that might give a new poster the idea that we haven't discussed those jello triplets yet (don't forget, a story about lime jello has now joined those about lemon and orange).I wonder if at some point, some Mom didn't name her son something like LeMangelo or Orangelo, maybe not even having anything to do with actual jello but just because she liked the sound of it. A nurse could have made an assumption about why the name was chosen and the story took on a life of its own from there. Once. Not thousands of times, as urban legend would have us believe given the proliferation of these stories, but just once.
LOL, I always did like the name "Angelo--" conjures up a sexy Italian race car driver I once read about in a (fiction) book.
I guess to be "different" one could add "Leman" to it--pronounced like the car and also the French racetrack, LeMans (leaving the "ans" off, since it's already included in "Angelo"--)
Hmmmmm......maybe when one of my daughters gets pregnant, I could convince her to name a son......nahhh, better not....
Isn't it funny, though, how even among one's own aquaintances there is always SOMEONE (usually an ER or OB nurse) who SWEARS they have seen a set of twins named Lemonjello and Oranjello? Even people you KNOW would never make up a story? I have a friend in Antioch, Tennessee, who swears on the Bible he's had boys with those names in his ER--and he lives by his Bible.
Still, I've never met any child OR adult with those names, and they sure seem to be popular, especially in the South! I guess I don't get out enough.
This isn't really the same thing as the original question, but I have a friend named Monsita. She has been called "Monistat" several times, including at her OB's office. Really, you'd think they'd consider it highly unlikely that someone would have that name, especially someone in their practice, which is located in a pretty tony area.
Here's another one you L&D nurses or ER nurses should appreciate. You know the usual mom who didn't know she was pregnant had a baby in the toilet. Well, one of those came into the ER many, many years ago. She of course didn't have a name for the baby. She asked the ER doctor if she had any ideas. After returning from the bathroom later, the doctor (whom I know) suggested Kohler. Yes after the bathroom amenities manufacturer. Somewhere in lower Alabama there is a kid graduating high school soon named Kohler--named for a toilet!
Lisa :)
When I was growing up - in the '70's - my parents had friends who named their daughter Amourous.......and their last name was Walker, my parents kept making jokes that her middle name should be 'Street'.
On my peds rotation I had to 'do time' in an inner-city day care center and their was an adorable little boy named Dijon - his mom must have loved mustard!
Leash :chuckle
LydiaNN
2,756 Posts
Oh, so the request was to just shut this one down and start anew? That wouldn't be bad. Of course, that might give a new poster the idea that we haven't discussed those jello triplets yet (don't forget, a story about lime jello has now joined those about lemon and orange).
I wonder if at some point, some Mom didn't name her son something like LeMangelo or Orangelo, maybe not even having anything to do with actual jello but just because she liked the sound of it. A nurse could have made an assumption about why the name was chosen and the story took on a life of its own from there. Once. Not thousands of times, as urban legend would have us believe given the proliferation of these stories, but just once.