This post is really about the dangers of being seduced by research. It all started with a tiny snippet of irrelevant information on twitter telling me that a popular girl’s name was invented by Shakespeare. Hmm, I thought I wonder how many other names have been created by writers…and several hours later this is the result.photo credit: merra m. via photopin cc
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Wow….I didn’t know about most of them! 🙂
xx
Nor did I when I started. Fiona really surprised me.
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Very interesting, many much more recent than I supposed. Now what about a list of descriptive names for which Trollope would seem the natural master?
I thought for sure the Shakespearean invention you were talking about was Jessica, which he invented for “The Merchant of Venice.” This was a really interesting blog post. I had wondered about some of these myself.
Jessica?1 I didn’t know that – thanks for letting me know.
Mostly nonsense
I wrote this post about the dangers of research – I was thinking about how it can be addictive and how much time can be wasted. But clearly getting it wrong is far worse. To err is human, to forgive is divine. Please put me right!
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How interesting. I did not know this.
So interesting! I had no idea. And yes, I’ve wasted a lot of valuable time doing research like this.:-)
How do we know that the author of a work that is centuries old “invented” a name from scratch and did not simply use a name of someone he or she knew (or had heard of)? It’s not like we had a complete census from 16th Century England.
True, in many instances we can’t be sure that it was actually invented by the writer, only that it was the first time it was recorded (as far as we have been able to discover).
I read somewhere that ‘Madison’ wasn’t used as a girl’s name until after Daryl Hannah’s character in ‘Splash’ (1984)
In the film her name was unpronounced by humans, so chose the name from the street in New York she and Tom Hanks happened to be walking down, Hanks’ character remarking that it wasn’t really suitable for a woman.
That’s interesting and, of course, since the 80s some place names have been used as first names.