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No . . .
in reply to a message by jynx
No-one in an English-speaking country (England, Australia, America, Canada, et al) would give Jinx / Jynx as a name to a child, unless they were a truly cruel parent (and those do exist! Lol).Don't worry, you're not the only one who finds Gianfranco confusing! He'll no doubt answer you anyway, but Gianfranco is a contraction of Giovanni and Francesco - Italian forms of John and Francis. follow the hyperlinks for details on the meanings of those names :-)Where are you from? (& sorry if you said it before and I missed it!) I'm Australian.
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:Di didnt found gianfranco confusing, but cool. i'm from hungary. what's the weather down there?? it's quite cold in here. i had to put on my winter-coat in the morning.
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In Australia it's warming up - Sydney is seeing weather of around 25 degrees celsius at the moment, and it's hotter in Perth. I've been inland all weekend though (at Bathurst, west of the Great Dividing Range), where it was still pretty cold.
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My mistakeI interpreted from what was said that the foundations lied in the lying Hollywood productions... Now I admit my mistake... Jinx for a child? you never meant that? didn't you? Think of phonetics first and of meanings afterwards...
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I've never heard of anyone actually using it, but there are people out there who name their kids Blade and Fire and Satan and Night, so why not Jinx? It's horrible but some parents have no sense.
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night and fire are quite okay, but think about it: when the celts spoke celt, i think they give name just like that. i mean they give the name xy and that meant xy. by the way in hungary there are name like these: napsugár(f)=sunshine, pintyõke(f) = little finch [you know, the bird] and stuff like that.
bye, and thanx guys!!! :D
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In Spanish the same happens but not very often... There is the name "Rosa", "Margarita", "Perla", "Esmeralda", "Rocio", etc. (Rose, "Sunflower" I think is the English word for "Margarita", Pearl, Emerald, Dew)... It happens in most languages that's the explanation behind all names and surnames having meanings in one way or another. And thanks for the "cool" comment back then... Bye and have a good time.
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so you live in spain? good for you. it's snowing today. :D Can you tell me a female name which means happiness? in spanish, of course. or it can be english, too.
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I can . . .And I'm too much of a smart-alec not to :-DFelicity is (roughly speaking) "happiness" in English; the Spanish version is Felicidad.:-)

This message was edited 11/15/2004, 6:46 PM

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thanks a lot guysi think we should finish now, but thanx again
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Althought you say we should finish just something extraFirst and least, I do not live in Spain, my sister does and she tells me it's cold there, really cold to our standards, both me and here are Peruvian, here we are entering summer and it's getting hotter but the average is "mild with unpredictable undesirable extremes, cold shadows but suffocatingly hot light-zones"... Felicidad is not a common name but it does means that, then there is the uncommon surname "Alegre" or "Alegría" which means "happy" and "Happiness" respectively... And as name there are; Alicia (Spanish form of Hebrew "Aliza" which means "joy" or of the German "Adalheidis" which means "noble kind/sort/type"), Leticia (Spanish form of late latin "Laetitia" which means "joy, happiness"), Nanda (It's and Indian name but at least here in Peru similiar names are easily adopted, phonetically it matches Spanish surnames), Winston (Ok, it's English and means "Joy Stone" but here in Peru it has arrived as a name for there is certain tendency of pretending that through alienation a superior status would be achieved, at least nominally, ironically those who use this names with that in mind use alternate spellings out of ignorance such as "Jhon" or "Yon" for "John" and names like "Esmiders" pretending to be the surname "Smithers" can be seen, in this way they reveal themselves as both ignorant and alienated, the first thing which is totally comprehensible and no reason for segregation, but the second, it's a lack of pride for what is one's own that does deserves some reaction; on the other hand those who they pretend to equal with such names tend to use Spanish names mostly, unless they have a non-Spanish surname and/or non-Spanish bloodline), Abigail ("my father is joy" is an uncommon name but can be seen with a non-English pronunciation which I would represent as; "Ah-bi-Gah-eel"), Fortunato ("fortunate" in Italian and/or Latin), Felix (popularity might have gone down due to "Felix the cat"), etc.
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soso, where the hell are you? in peru? Cool. and sorry for saying you're spanish, I mean you have already told me that your name is italian (and I saw that name in my Italian book. I learn italian :D). Tanx for these names. I just wanted to know which names are my sister/brother names, cuz my real name means happy. Ciao.Ps: if you want to contact me pls write an email: jynx_torquilla@feemail.hu it would be easier cuz i think we don't have enough place (have you seen how much have we written to each other?)
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