I-Can't-Believe-You'd-Name-Your-Child-That!

Some of the names I find on this site... I just can't believe you'd name your child that or deserves a good chuckle.
  1. Arkadij
    • Camera
      • Origin:

        English word name
      • Meaning:

        "an optical instrument used to capture and store images or videos"
      • Description:

        The late tennis great Arthur Ashe (whose wife was a photographer) pioneered word names when he used this for his daughter. It would make an interesting first or middle name possibility for parents involved with photography.
    • Danger
      • Origin:

        English word name
      • Meaning:

        "exposure to injury, pain, harm, or loss"
      • Description:

        Prime example of the aggressive word names that are an off-the-grid branch of the new macho names. Makes Cannon, Maverick, and Ranger feel almost soft and sensitive by comparison.
    • Doctor
      • Origin:

        Word name
      • Description:

        Doctor is an honorific used as a name, somewhat like names such as Bishop, King, and Princess. Banned in New Zealand, Doctor can lead to the kind of confusion you may feel would be only positive for your child -- a bona fide Doctor before he even gets to kindergarten. At its zenith in 1884, Doctor was used for 12 boys, but last year it didn't even clear the five-baby minimum to make it onto the Social Security extended list.
    • German
      • Origin:

        Spanish and Russian variation of Herman, German
      • Meaning:

        "warrior"
      • Description:

        German might seem like an unlikely occupant of the Top 1000 list, unless you realize that it's a Spanish name, with the accent on the second syllable. It's been on the U.S. list since 1973.
    • Nimrod
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "we shall rise up, we shall rebel"
      • Description:

        Our kids laughed when they saw this name. Enough said.
    • Oral
      • Wash
        • Whistler
          • Origin:

            English occupational name
          • Meaning:

            "one who whistles"
          • Description:

            A new entry is the fashionable new occupational name category -- and a jolly job it must be -- with the added attraction of relating to the great early 20th century American artist James Abbott McNeill Whistler, of "Whistler's Mother" fame.