new names
i'm the author of a book that has yet to bepublished, so i have to come up with names for my characters. 1 is a cat-demon named Neko, which is the Japanese word for CAT. i also have Nezumi, a rat-demon. ive also got Byakko(tiger) Seiryou(dragon) and, though it isn't really a name, but a word, Karasu(means crow, but used for rooster-spirit). i hope these help the database!!
-OSHRON
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Sorry, Oshron, but this page only use names that are actually used among real people.Happiness can be found even in the darkest of times if only one remembers to turn on the lights
~J.K. Rowling
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Hi there, I wanted to share with you that I named my daughter Katana. She is now 4 yrs old. I had previously heard of it in relation to the japanese samuri sword and the suzuki motorbike. I always thought it such a pretty name.
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anyone out there?
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In fact the names Akako, Katana, Usagi and Nanashi were recently deleted because they only belong to characters in Japanese anime or manga, not to real people. Admittedly the Japanese section is still in poor shape.I must point out however that not all of the names on this website belong to real people:
http://www.behindthename.com/nmc/lite.php - names from literature
http://www.behindthename.com/nmc/astr.php - names from astronomy
http://www.behindthename.com/nmc/myth.php - names from mythologyMaybe this site needs a category like "pop culture" or "entertainment"? Names from anime (as well others already in the database such as Anakin or Draven) would fit well there.
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I'm in favor of adding the "pop culture" category! I think there is lots of interest in such names, anyway.It would not really matter if a name was a documented usage, since it need only have been used "in" pop culture. (If you don't point out actual usage, or lack of it, for "literature" and "astronomy" names, you shouldn't need to point it out for "pop culture" names.)Actually, IMO "pop culture" or "entertainment" falls into the category "literature" anyway. It'd be sometimes tricky, but ultimately more informative, to keep them separate, though. Slightly OT question if you have time to answer: What's the minimum documentation of usage you need to include a name in the database, or is there a requirement for real-life usage?- chazda
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There is a requirement. Generally I just use Google to find examples of people who bear the name, and cross with any reference books I have.
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I do think that most of the names on those lists have been given to real people, though. Certainly I have seen examples of real human babies named Aladdin, Anakin, Arwen, Atticus, Ayla, Bayard, Caspian, Cinderella, D'Artagnan, Draven, Elanor, Eowyn, Galadriel, Hamlet, Lestat, Merry, Mignon, Othello, Pippin, Rohan, Scheherazade, Undine, and Zuleika from the Literature Names; and Altair, Arista, Lyra, Rigel, and Vega from the astronomy list. I don't have time to go through the whole mythology list right now but many of them have certainly also been bestowed on real infants.
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Okay, that's true. I'm sure there are a few Anakins and Lestats out there, but they're listed on the website not because I've seen examples of them as real names but because they belong to significant fictional characters.
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I really don't want to imagine a child named Lestat.
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