King of the Jungle
Courtier
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2011
- Messages
- 981
- City
- Melbourne
- Country
- Australia
Or Alyce, Alison, Adeliz, Alissa, Aliz, Alisha .. yes, there are so many variants.
The classic Alice is sweet.
The classic Alice is sweet.
I'd say anything starting with an S is a big no no
One thing we can be 99.9% sure of is that if the child is a girl, she will *not* be named Samantha. ?
Perhaps not ...
Barack Oliver Dwayne Idi, Baron Kilkeel (or Earl of Dumbarton ??? How do Harry's titles work?)
Lady Sissy Samantha Cecilia Wallis of Sussex
I'd say anything starting with an S is a big no no
So not Susan Sussex??
The legal last name would be Mountbatten-Windsor I think, not Sussex.
LaRae
Perhaps not ...
Barack Oliver Dwayne Idi, Baron Kilkeel (or Earl of Dumbarton ??? How do Harry's titles work?)
Lady Sissy Samantha Cecilia Wallis of Sussex
We have all had a lot of fun try to guess names for the royal baby. To finish off how about some suggestions on WHAT NOT to call the little one. By the way, these are all English and Scottish names belonging to monarchs and consorts.
Baby girl Eadgyth Berengeria Ingibiorg Euphemia
Baby boy Ethelred Cerdic Guildford Macbeth.
in the *not* category:
Anything from the Jamie Oliver book of baby names
As far as celebrity names go, his kids aren't too bad. Ok Petal, River and Buddy are, but Poppy and Daisy are quite cute and popular names. They would fit right in with many of the upper crust baby names. .
Awe I had it right up there with Princess Berengaria or Boedicia
It would be interesting - and humorous - to see how badly "Boudicca" would be mis-pronounced. For a long time, it was spelled "Boadicea" (or something like it) and pronounced "BOW-ah-di-say-a" when in fact the Iceni name is now more correctly spelled as "Boudicca" (meaning "Victory") and pronounced "BOO-di-kah." Many news outlets in the US still can't pronounced Eugenie's name correctly - even after showing the vows at her wedding and hearing HER pronounce her name! (Instead of the correct "YOO -zha-nee" it's still usually "Yoo-JEEN-ee") And don't even get me started on Prince Louis...Now that you mention it, I'd love to see Boedicia as a middle name for a BRF girl. Specifically as a middle name only, though! A reference to someone really kickass and strong from their tradition, but not to the point of being saddled with it every day.
I would highly doubt Wallis would be in there!
My Guesses are:
~Nicholas Spencer Phillip, Earl of Dumbarton
~ Lady Amelia Frances Elizabeth Mountbatten-Windsor
Telimena, I like Nicholas for a boy's first name. There have not been a lot of Nicholases in the British Royal Family.
I also like the name Nicholas. In addition to a great-uncle it was the name of Philip's great-great-grandfather, Emperor Nicholas I of Russia. Or maybe they could go with Paul, the name of Nicholas I's father, Emperor Paul.Likely because the BRF, in the main line at least, tends to stick to more traditional family names. And there isn't a history of Nicholas in the BRF. In other royal families yes, but not the BRF.
The one member who has it is Lord Nicholas Windsor. He was named in honor of his paternal great-grandfather, Princess Marina's father Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark. Prince Nicholas was Philip's paternal Uncle, but I don't see them honoring him.
Well, it's a bit of a stretch, but Prince Philip did have a 17th century ancestor named Adam Wollenschlager, through his great grandmother Julia Princess of Battenberg. [emoji3]I like the name Adam. Don’t think it’s a tradition royal family name, and completely out of left field. But maybe a middle name?
I also like the name Nicholas. In addition to a great-uncle it was the name of Philip's great-great-grandfather, Emperor Nicholas I of Russia. Or maybe they could go with Paul, the name of Nicholas I's father, Emperor Paul.
there are like 100 Nicholases in other RF's at this time alone...I can't see it somehow....