I don't know why this made me laugh so much. Gingers! There's no gingerism in my family so I'm guessing they'd have to get it from the mother. I don't know any ginger women, though. I really don't. Not even in an online way. Unless there's a ginger woman here who is yet to be declared ginger and is the future mother of my future four ginger daughters.
Aww, I do love a Dublin accent. I could get on board with this! She shall be called Molly Malone and we shall name our daughters Aoife, Clodagh, Fionnuala, and Saoirse!
Yeah, of course. They're Irish names. Fairly common too. My friend's mum was a Nuala (Fionnuala), another friend's daughter is an Aoife (pronounced Evie), I once dealt with a Clodagh (pronounced Clo-da) on the phone, and a colleague's middle name is Saoirse (pronounced Sorsha, and meaning freedom). We have lots of Irish in my city because Liverpool is the port they sail to and Manchester is kind of the sister city.
is it normal that I can correctly predict the future 9/10 times?
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I don't know why this made me laugh so much. Gingers! There's no gingerism in my family so I'm guessing they'd have to get it from the mother. I don't know any ginger women, though. I really don't. Not even in an online way. Unless there's a ginger woman here who is yet to be declared ginger and is the future mother of my future four ginger daughters.
Step forward, ginger mother and gird your loins!
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NeuroNeptunian
11 years ago
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Straight from the heart of Dublin with skin so white that it blinds you when the sun shines!
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dappled
11 years ago
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Aww, I do love a Dublin accent. I could get on board with this! She shall be called Molly Malone and we shall name our daughters Aoife, Clodagh, Fionnuala, and Saoirse!
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NeuroNeptunian
11 years ago
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...are those even real names?
I have a ginger buddy from Dublin and I love his accent.
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dappled
11 years ago
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Yeah, of course. They're Irish names. Fairly common too. My friend's mum was a Nuala (Fionnuala), another friend's daughter is an Aoife (pronounced Evie), I once dealt with a Clodagh (pronounced Clo-da) on the phone, and a colleague's middle name is Saoirse (pronounced Sorsha, and meaning freedom). We have lots of Irish in my city because Liverpool is the port they sail to and Manchester is kind of the sister city.
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NeuroNeptunian
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Wow, I am going to have to look them up, because I can not figure out how to pronounce them.