@Azure_1802 Let's be honest, most of the ones who end up with weird names likely because the authors think they sound cool just like my formerly weeaboo friends back in middle school giving their OCs Japanese sounding names. Others specifically chose a meaning then pick a name, like Dorothy and Theodore mean "gift of god" John/Giovanni/Ivan mean "god is gracious" Cyrus mean"Sun like." Or like everyone gets obsessed with the same name like boom suddenly 50 billion Claudes
@Azure_1802 Also at least their naming isn't as weird as some of the names in Victorian England. There were all the normal names then names like "Minty Badger" "Toilet" "Princess Cheese" "Friendless"
@Umbrecola: i still have my Japanese-like name i thought of in my chuuni teen as my nickname strangely, i kinda like the made up names like Lulu, Riri, Poipoi or Mumu or like that, it's cute.
Wait, really? Someone named their kid 'toilet'? Aww, in my country, there were people from older time (like in 1950s) named their kids with names that mean 'sh!t', 'dung', 'long neck', etc.
@Azure_1802 Lulu is a real name. Riri I've seen as a nickname in manga. Poipoi and mumu sound like onomatopoeias. People just gotta not name their kids weird things they'd get bullied for, kids can sue their parents where I live for emotional damage caused by terrible names. Speaking of middle school I remember hearing about a girl who went to court her parents because they named her "Talula Does the Hula From Hawaii." I remember a few years back hearing people naming their children # and ;, I think now at least in the jurisdiction I live you can't use symbols in kids' names
@Azure_1802@Umbrecola
Well, according to some research on the name, Blondina really exists and it is a name rsrs it has some variations, in the African variation it means "Gift of God" and in the European variation (like finnish and swedish): 1) From the Latin “Blādum> Blŭndus ”, Meaning“ fodder, flour, hay ”. 2) From the Frankish “* blund”, meaning “soft, delicate”. However, Blŭndus was a common pronunciation of the Latin “flavus”, meaning “yellow”. Another guess (discounted by German etymologists), is that it represents a Vulgar Latin “* albundus”, from “alba”, meaning “white (understood as clear, bright)”.