Name that fits two nationalities
#1
Posted 20 February 2010 - 10:10 PM
Location: Spain
Message:
Hello I am English and my partner is Spanish we are looking for a boy's name that will fit both nationalities...
#2
Posted 21 February 2010 - 09:33 AM
#3
Posted 21 February 2010 - 01:37 PM
#4
Posted 21 February 2010 - 05:39 PM
Noah
Patrick
Jacob
Henry
Oliver
Adrian
#5
Posted 22 April 2010 - 08:17 PM
#6
Posted 24 April 2010 - 10:02 PM
Name: Nina
Location: Spain
Message:
Hello I am English and my partner is Spanish we are looking for a boy's name that will fit both nationalities...
#7
Posted 27 April 2010 - 10:00 AM
#8
Posted 01 May 2010 - 12:16 AM
Name: Nina
Location: Spain
Message:
Hello I am English and my partner is Spanish we are looking for a boy's name that will fit both nationalities...
What about:
Alan
Adan (fave: Spanish version of Adam )
Xavier
Manolo
Agustin
#9
Posted 09 May 2010 - 08:12 PM
Many Wow gold, tourist organizations are directly responsible for this state of affairs. They deliberately set out to protect their clients from too much contact with the local population. The modern tourist leads a cosseted, sheltered life. He lives at international hotels, where he eats his international food and sips his international drink while he gazes at the natives from a distance. Conducted tours to places of interest are carefully censored. The tourist is allowed to see only what the organizers want him to see and no Wow gold more.
A strict world of warcraft gold, schedule makes it impossible for the tourist to wander off on his own; and anyway, language is always a barrier, so he is only too happy to be protected in this way. At its very worst, this leads to a new and hideous kind of colonization. The summer quarters of the inhabitants of the cite universitaire: are temporarily reestablished on the island of Corfu. Blackpool is recreated at Torremolinos where the traveler goes not to eat paella, but fish and chips world of warcraft gold.
The sad wow cd keys, thing about this situation is that it leads to the persistence of national stereotypes. We don’t see the people of other nations as they really are, but as we have been brought up tobelieve they are. You can test this for yourself. Take five nationalities, say, French, German, English, American and Italian. Now in your mind, match them with these five adjectives: musical, amorous, cold, pedantic, native.Far from providing us with any insight into the national characteristics of the peoples just mentioned, these adjectives actually act as barriers. So when you set out on your travels, the only characteristics you notice are those which confirm your preconceptions. You come away with the highly unoriginal and inaccurate impression that, say, ‘Anglo-Saxons are hypocrites’ of that ‘Latin peoples shout a lot’wow cd keys.
You wow power leveling, only have to make a few foreign friends to understand how absurd and harmful national stereotypes are. But how can you make foreign friends when the tourist trade does its best to prevent you wow power leveling?
Carried to an dog carriers,extreme,stereotypes can be positively dangerous. Wild generalizations stir up racial hatred and blind us to the basic fact—how trite it sounds! – That all people are human. We are all similar to each other and at the same time all unique dog carriers.
#10
Posted 20 June 2010 - 10:07 AM
We have a son named Alexander and we used to playfully call him Alejandro.
Other names that you might consider:
Antonio
Marcos
Carlos
Thomas/Tomás
Nicholas/Nicolás
Diego
Like any_
#11
Posted 07 July 2010 - 12:10 PM
Adamo Riley.
Marcos Thomas.
Antonio Christian.
#12
Posted 10 July 2010 - 12:22 AM