One of the top prospects in the NFL draft is D'Brickashaw  Ferguson. D'Brickashaw is a U. of Virginia offensive tackle. His mother named  D'Brickashaw after Richard Chamberlain's Father Ralph de  Bricassart from "The Thorn  Birds" miniseries. I can't think of any other reasons to write the name  "D'Brickashaw  "
And then there's the kind of names that Mormons in Utah saddle their kids with.  I hadn't realized how similar in whimsicality  Mormon first names have been to modern black names. Utah names tend to sound  like the result of a creative collaboration between a 16-year-old black single  mother and L. Ron Hubbard. Cari Bilyeu Clark explains in "What's  in a (Utah) Name?"
With the generally larger-than-average family, often saddled with the very ordinary surnames Smith, Johnson, or Young, it's not surprising that many Utah parents look for unique given names for their children. When you throw in the reverence for family and ancestors forwarded by the LDS Church, it seems inevitable that someone would end up with LaEarl, KDell, Arnolene or Hariella.
Of course, some guys get  all the luck. One of Brigham Young's direct male line descendents won the  Heisman Trophy at Brigham Young University, then went on to become perhaps the  most gifted quarterback in the history of the NFL. And this Mr. Young didn't get  stuck with a Mormon boy's name like "Azer Baloo," "Bretile,"  "Clemouth, "Denim Levi,"  "D'Loaf," "EdDean," or "ElVoid," (just to choose a  few from the first 5/26th of the Utah Baby  Namer for Boys). Nah, he got to be Steve  Young. (Okay, I'll admit he sounds like some science  nerd, but "Steve" is still a lot better than such only-in-Utah  names as "Sterile," "Tabernacle," or "Thermos.")
Clark notes:
The  quintessential Utah name often has a French-sounding prefix such as Le-, La-, Ne-,  or Va-. Often names appear to have genesis in the combined names of the  parents--Veradeane or GlenDora, for example. Related is the practice of  feminizing the father's name--as in Vonda (dad is Vaughan) or Danetta. Others,  such as Snell or Houser, appear to be surnames called into service as first  names.
Related is the curious tendency, more common in Utah than elsewhere, for men  (women do not seem to do this) to use the first initial, then the full middle  name as the given name, such as L. Flake Rogers, who ran for office in Utah  County when we lived there. (Come on, you've noticed this habit among the  general authorities of the LDS church!) Besides puzzling over why someone would  want to be known as "Flake," it makes one wonder just what the  "L" stands for.
So my husband and I entertained ourselves by collecting the often bizarre names  we found in Utah publications (including the obituaries, which indicates that  this is not a recent fad) and of Utah natives we met... (My personal favorite,  LaNondus, came from this source.) Another friend told us of a set of sisters,  all of whose names began with "Ja."
Once my husband had Internet access, he collected more names and corresponded  with another couple who amused themselves the same way. They made cleverly  categorized lists: "The ward choir director's daughters: LaVoice, Choral,  Audia."
It makes you wonder what some parents were thinking when, for instance, they  named their baby girl Lanae (la-nay)--and she unfortunately ended up with a big  nose (le nez [la-nay] in French means "the nose"). Or the girl named  M'Lu--are clever wags endlessly asking her to skip to it? And how the heck do  people with apostrophes in their names fill out computerized forms? There's no  apostrophe space. The guy I really pity, though, is the one saddled with the  unfortunate moniker, Rube.
Of course, parents cannot predict what new interpretations the marketplace will  bring to the names they lovingly bestow on their offspring. I once worked at a  company which had dealings with a woman named LaPriel (pronounced la-prell).  When I told my former roommate about this inexplicable first name, she  sardonically replied, "What's her sister's name--LaTegrin?"...
Some names, though, seem to defy description--if not pronunciation. While pride  of place may have spawned Utahna, how did somebody come up with Wealtha? And  while Lloydine's genesis seems plausible, how on earth were Printha or Noy  coined? And I have no idea what constitutes the correct pronunciation for Kairle  or Tawhnye. (I suspect they may be wildly creative spellings of Carol and  Tonya.)
By the way, is this all for  real or am I being the victim of an elaborate hoax by cynical Nevadans making  fun of their more pious neighbors to the east? I mean, I can believe there's a  boy in Utah named "Stockton  Malone," but what about "Truss," "Umson" (not to  mention "Urmson"), and "Zanderalex" (which I think I got a  prescription for when I had a rash).
Well, Google shows that there really have been men named "Elvoid,"  which I would have thought was a name made up by the bassist in the 1977 punk  band Richard Hell and the Voidoids.) So, this can't be a complete hoax, but I'm  still not sure I'll completely trust these names.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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3 comments:
The name "Flake" is a prominent
pioneer name in the 19th century
inter-mountain west i.e. Arizona].
Oft times the name is perpetuated
from generation to generation on
the maternal side by using it as
a middle name.
Maybe "L." wasn't such a bad name,
but more likely he was proud of his
heritage, being from the Flake family.
I once read somewhere that W(illard) Mitt Romney had a couple of uncles named Att and Ott.
I live in a town with a lot of Mormons, many of them migrants from Utah, and a Mormon temple. My children have gone to school with a lot of Mormon kids; I'm sure that if many of them had strange names, I would have heard about them.
Yep, it's true alright. I have a sister named LaPriel, though it's pronounced luh PREEL. My brother is a painter an signs his work with 1st initial full middle and last name. Though wikipedia doesn't say, I suspect L. Ron Hubbard was a Mormon. Lots of Mormony names in his line. I have known males named LaDon, Merle, Kenyan, LaVoine, Lemoine, etc... Can't wait to let my brother know it's a Mormony way to sign his name. Our line goes back to the beginning (Joseph Smith Jr). I was actually raised in Orem, which is a cross between 'Leave it to Beaver' and 'The Twilight Zone'.
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