ChatterBank16 mins ago
Names, In Particular Wendy, Invented In Fiction
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I believe this name didn't exist before Barrie invented it for Peter Pan. I find that quite incredible considering how popular it became and the Wendy house. It seems slightly old fashioned now but I have known several 'Wendys'.
Has any other names been invented in the past 200 years that have taken off like this?
Has any other names been invented in the past 200 years that have taken off like this?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hayley. Hayley Mills was the first person with this name but it was because her mother was Mary Hayley Bell the authoress, and her father the actor John Mills. Mary Hayley Bell wrote ‘Whistle Down the Wind’ which was a delightful little story about children who mistook a tramp for Jesus. Hayley Mills starred in the film when she was a child.
I could reel off some of the names of the paediatric patients I've encountered recently. Needless to say the trend for making up stupid names and double-barrelled names continues.
Lexon-Leon is one I came across not so long ago. Daft names like Summer Holiday and Harley Davidson still occur.
Wendy is the name of my cousin - I don't think she's too fond of it.
Lexon-Leon is one I came across not so long ago. Daft names like Summer Holiday and Harley Davidson still occur.
Wendy is the name of my cousin - I don't think she's too fond of it.
Pamela
//Sir Philip Sidney invented the name Pamela for a pivotal character in his epic prose work, The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia, written in the late 16th century and published posthumously. The name is widely taken to mean "all sweetness", formed on the Greek words πᾶν pan ("all") and μέλι meli ("honey"),[2][3] but there is no evidence regarding what meaning, if any, Sidney intended for it.//
//Sir Philip Sidney invented the name Pamela for a pivotal character in his epic prose work, The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia, written in the late 16th century and published posthumously. The name is widely taken to mean "all sweetness", formed on the Greek words πᾶν pan ("all") and μέλι meli ("honey"),[2][3] but there is no evidence regarding what meaning, if any, Sidney intended for it.//
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