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Unique character names - yes or no?
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Bláthnaid
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May 09, 2021 06:46AM

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I read a book recently that introduced me to about 7 different people in a couple of paragraphs, and none of the names were the "usual" kind. A couple of pages later I had no clue who was who anymore. But this was quite an extreme case; there was a character named Olthar and another called Olthaar who were two completely different people and not at all related. A Gondar and a Gondabar. A Darthor and a Dakon. I took a print at some of the names and that's the only reason I can remember them right now hahaha





but I couldn't pronounce the characters from Branden Sanderson 's Elantris


i highly agree

Well it lasted about a week. As much as I liked the name, it just didn’t sit right for this character. Now he’s Demo which is essentially a nickname of Democulus. Anyway, I thought I’d share because there’s just a few names as an author that you lose sleep over!

If the characters are human of human descent and everything It does make sense for them to have common names though.




Kingly wrote: "I love them but it is a little frustrating when I don't have a clue on how to begin pronouncing."
lol mee too! that's the most frustrating thing about the names
lol mee too! that's the most frustrating thing about the names
I just care if the name matches the character.



But I hate it when authors take a common name and change a few letters to make it unnecessarily long. Imo it feels like a lazy to make a basic character seem quirky. (imagine Timothy is written as Timmertheé, for example.)

Yes, I find them incredibly beautiful and interesting.
However, in one book my limit is 1-2 really unusual names. If there are more, it just becomes very confusing and annoying.

I also don't like it if too many characters have unique names instead of just one or two.

I don't know why these two categories specifically get to me because, in general, I do enjoy cool names or words that aren't normally names being used that way (I recently came across a girl named Theta and loved that).
![➺ kath [ia] (kathxarchives)](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1748840117p1/167355845.jpg)


If it is contemporary, a usual name is perfectly acceptable.
If it is fantasy, uniqueness may fit the invented cultures: e.g. son of someone as in Norse mythology Thor Odinson or (as someone already mentioned) different sounding names for orcs vs elves or for different cultures within the fantasy world. However, a normal-ish nickname does help a lot when reading and not stumbling upon those names every time.
Uniqueness imho depends a lot on the culture. For me as a German, a completely common African or Asian name (think John Smith) can be very unique and uncommon as I am not from there and surrounded by Johann Schmidts. Not condoning simply taking those names in an English country side setting as that would be cultural appropriation.
Translating unique names can be very difficult though. Now don’t hate me for bringing up Harry Potter but the naming of characters and places is linguistically very interesting. For the longest time, I did not understand why Diagon Alley = diagonally (translated as Winkelgasse = alleyway of angles) or Hogwarts = warts on wild male pig (translated as-is) were funny or why Hermione was so difficult to pronounce (Hermine as an old-fashioned normal German name). I imagine more subtle jokes like Snape (sounds like snake) escaped a lot of young non-English readers.
A unique name can even have an unwanted connotation, like Suri, the daughter of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes: princess in Persian but pickpocket in Japanese…

if I can not pronounce then please stop .
Champion of fate is my cr and I have a huge confusion Than I can't pronounce any name of it .

I am annoyed at slice-of-life characters having weird names for no particular rhyme or reason, especially if this weirdness is never addressed within the story (ex: Hardin Scott).
I am fine with a character having a weird name in a fantasy book that is still grounded in our world, especially if it relates to the story as a whole (ex: Perseus Jackson)
I am okay with a weird name in a full fantastic setting, though, nitpicking, I tend to be annoyed when the name does not relate to the setting of the story. Celaena is much more fitting to the very fairy-tale-esque setting of the throne of glass than Locke Lamora for the fantasy Renaissance Italian world of the Lies of Locke Lamora.
and I EXPECT weird names in a science-fiction futuristic worlds, (ex: Jinx)




I agree





If the names are hard to pronounce I'm usually okay with it. I just get slightly annoyed when I find out much later that I've been pronouncing it wrong the whole time 😂
Books mentioned in this topic
Antunites Unite (other topics)Three Dark Crowns (other topics)
The Unspoken Name (other topics)