View Message

[Opinions] Candy
What would you think if you met a girl named Candy? Not short for Candace or Candida or anything, *just* Candy? "And by the way, dearie, your punctuation sucks canal water!"
-The Ghost of Vivian Vance
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I'd think of the just-Candy I was at school with; a pleasant, pretty, unremarkable person whose life was easy except at the beginning of each school year, when she'd have to cope with the same old interrogation: "Are you sure?" "Have you asked your mother?" "What do you mean, it IS your full name?" ad infinitum. Just not worth it, IMO.
vote up1
I'd think"clueless parents", really. Candy is fine for a nickname, but it needs to have an actual name, not a food group. Or a confection, I suppose;candy is more a treat than food.
vote up1
On its own? No, I can't say I'm a very big fan of it. I used to have an aunt named Candy (one of my mom's sisters) she passed away a few years ago, never really knew her though. Her name wasn't short for Candace or any other as one might think. Sherrie or Carrie or something similiar to those. I have 3 other aunts who's nickname that aren't tied to their names as wellPenny & Cookie (Sherrie & Mary I think) "you get a cookie for a penny" I guess they were inseparable growing upThen something about chokie on a candy.I primarily know the as aunt (what they main go or went by)
Penny, Cookie, chokie & candy (Candy the deceased one) Slightly weird. I know
vote up1
Weird but adorable! I love those bizarre family nicknames that come out of nowhere.I had 3 great-aunts called Billy (Ruth) Nooky (Constance) and Doonoo (Julia). My grandmother Mary Juanita was known as Wean(Nooky was born in 1920. It didn't have that meaning in those days. Obviously the name was never used outside the family :-))
vote up1
Too sweet for my taste. But as a nickname for Candida, it's not that bad. Maybe.
vote up1
It's not that bad. Fluffy and kitschy maybe, but not terrible. I'd rather be a Candy than, say, a girl named James.
vote up1
Good point. I'm so tired of the whole 'we're so edgy, we gave our girl a male name'. Funny that it never cuts the other way and you hear of a boy named - for example - Rosemary.
vote up1
I'd think "tacky". Candy is one of those nicknames that sounds more like a literal nickname (as in a pet name used affectionately) than just a diminutive. It also doesn't sound very mature on a grown woman. At least a Candace/Candice or Candida would have the full name to fall back on. Someone legally named Candy doesn't have a choice.

This message was edited 8/9/2016, 1:32 PM

vote up1
I don't think it's that bad if you were born in the '50s. It's like a charming little sorta tacky period piece.
vote up1
Love this description. There's a sort of charm underneath the sugary tackiness.
vote up1
I'd either think she was a stripper who renamed herself, or she had very inconsiderate parents.
vote up1
I would think she was a stripper
vote up1
A stripper from the 80's?
vote up1
Yes. Or a retro 80s-themed stripper...
vote up1
Ish. Tacky.
vote up1
I'd think she has such a cute name but I'd prefer it as a nickname. It's still cute as hell.
vote up1
It's cute as a nickname, but if it's your real name it's kind of weird.
vote up1
I would think it was a shame, because Candy is just silly-sounding, and Candace is so pretty. It'd be about like meeting a little girl named Missy who doesn't even have Melissa or Michelle as a backup, or a little boy who is literally Junior, not Ronald Wayne Jr. or Antonio Ramon Jr.
vote up1
I like it in a sslightly GPish sort of way but I'm a huge partisan of having a "real" name on the dotted line.
vote up1