Greek names are awesome. I'd love to be called Hyperion instead of stupid boring Richard.
Eh, it's our way around here.How did a thread about off-duty attire become a thread about odd names?
Cloaks are better.
Ava’s a shocker. I mean, who’s the most famous Ava you can think of?
Luna’s kind of funny. Can’t wait till there’s an explosion of Ganymede’s, Io’s, and Europa’s.
Also, I don’t think Christopher, William, Timothy et al are going anywhere. (A generation of women will name their children Timothée [Chalamet] you wait and see.) I’m Greek, and we still use Artemis, Antigone, Electra, Athena, Persephone, Eurydice…Achilles, Pericles, Ares, Odysseus, Socrates, Hippocrates, etc…as well as Chris, Nick, Greg, Luke, George, Elizabeth, Victoria, Maria, etc.
Ava DuVernay comes to my mind immediately.
Popular name trends often come from pervasive fictional characters as much as anything, Harry Potter caused a massive uptick in kids named Hermione. Could it be that there’s a (or even several) character(s) in popular fiction named Ava that helped its popularity increase as well?
Starfleet doesn't do cloaks.Cloaks are better.
They got their cloak on in the 32nd century and who knows how long StarFleet had cloaks =D.Starfleet doesn't do cloaks.![]()
Why as far back as Tuesday, of course.They got their cloak on in the 32nd century and who knows how long StarFleet had cloaks =D.
=DWhy as far back as Tuesday, of course.
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