Scott DeWar
Prof. Emeritus-Supernatural Events/Countermeasure
These days I dislike "random collection of syllables" names, whether fantasy or modern, and generally try to avoid them.
so a name like ackgiludhad would not be a good name to you, right?
These days I dislike "random collection of syllables" names, whether fantasy or modern, and generally try to avoid them.
I have two friends who create the most cringe-worthy names.
One picks "goofball" names: Waldo Stefenpepper, Bartholomew Buttlebottom, Mallomar the Mighty... or too "pulpy": Hawkraven, Starella, or Mack Steel.
Another makes "shtick" names: Robin Holmes, Will Dicker, and Harold "Harry" Sachs.
Joseirus, the Egyptian God of Mexican Wrestlers
Some modern names are not appropriate for a fantasy world due to their specific real-world connotations, OTOH many modern names have ancient roots which people may be unaware of, eg 'Paris' is not just a city in France.
I most commonly use real-world culturally appropriate names; I'm most comfy with Norse names which have just the right mix of familiarity and exoticness.
Agreed in principle but not in practice. Sure, Paris has ancient roots but aside from the reference to the city, do you really want endless Paris Hilton jokes?
Rolf - not Ralph, which is a modern derivative, Lance as a name came after the Middle Ages, prior it was a weapon (as a thought, would you name your kid sword or crossbow? If so, please seek helpThis is why the topic gets weird. I mean, Ralph can be traced back to Old Norse. Bradley goes back to Old English. Various forms of Lance can be found all over the place (it goes back to German and French among others). Leroy is a bit more problematical as a first name (dating back to only the 19th century), but it was a French surname for centuries before that.
<SNIP>
Also, why is it so weird for Western names but Eastern names are fine? (Cao Cao, Xiang Xiang, etc.)? Linguistics is really a strange field to begin with.
Or remember the names in Alien Nation?