Lots of female names have unstressed feminising suffixes (like -a) or diminutive ones (like -y/ie). They make the name sound softer. Think of masculine vs. feminine line endings in poetry (final syllable stressed vs. unstressed). Calling your sassy, tough-girl, martial-arts-wielding heroine "Sally", "Lucy" or "Amanda" doesn't work as well if you're trying to create a character like Kate Beckett.
Of course, there are other monosyllabic female names like "Ann", "Sue", "Rose" and "Eve". But "Kate" sounds harder than all of those because all its consonants are plosives (sounds you can't say continuously). And yet it's not an unusual name, so we can all think of a "Kate" who we know and don't dislike too much. That's my theory.
At last, I have an apostrophe!
*MySmiley*
Foil fencers Dance the Spears. Or, at least, the foils.
Too stubborn to remove that extraneous *MySmiley*
~The Decapitator~
*MySmiley*
Foil fencers Dance the Spears. Or, at least, the foils.
Too stubborn to remove that extraneous *MySmiley*
~The Decapitator~
fictional detectives whose first name (if sometimes shortened) is Kate. Why so many?
28/01/2012 03:19:52 AM
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Why are so many male action heroes John or Jack? For women it's a feminine, tough & generic name
28/01/2012 12:19:38 PM
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Re: When I write my own hardboiled detective, I'm gonna name her Taylor Swift.
02/02/2012 02:56:59 AM
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Monosyllabic names sound tougher. And the pink half of the baby-naming book is short on those.
28/01/2012 12:27:40 PM
- 651 Views
Hurray for linguistics! *NM*
02/02/2012 08:07:50 PM
- 379 Views