What type of name is kevin
Last ranked 82 in Chile. Last ranked 78 in Czech Republic. Last ranked 43 in Denmark. Last ranked in England and Wales. Last ranked 18 in Germany.
Last ranked 55 in Hungary. Last ranked in Ireland. Last ranked 58 in Italy. Last ranked 33 in Mexico. Last ranked in Netherlands. Last ranked 94 in New Zealand.
Last ranked in Northern Ireland. Freedom is essential to your happiness. Traveling, meeting new friends, and getting new experience can add variety to your life. You are no stranger to change — you embrace it. Your sharp mind makes you curious about many things. You may find it difficult to commit.
You want to jump from one project to another. When people hear the name Kevin, they perceive you as someone who is gentle, sensitive and intuitive. Predatory individuals see you as an easy target. You attract the opposite sex with your passion and attentive nature.
The exquisite sense of beauty and excellent taste you show makes others admire you. You are an enlightened one who relies on your gut to make decisions. You have the power of concentration and good memories. Try to avoid situations that could trigger your edginess. You can write with high artistic qualities.
Your most likely vocation: skilled worker in any field, historian, philosopher, poet, writer, counsellor, adviser. Lucky botanicals: Elder, blackberry, hops, juniper, linseed, grapes, all types of fruit juices. Hey Kevin! Perhaps, we theorised, when you added them together they achieved a kind of critical mass - like a celebrity nuclear reaction.
Rival theorists suggested that the name was copied from members of boy bands, or even, God forbid, from the American film Home Alone, in which the geeky super-child at the heart of the story is also called Kevin. The number of new Kevins in France has slowed to a dreary trickle these days, with potential parents frightened off, perhaps, by the trenchant manner in which French sociologists analyse such matters.
Kevin, they say, simply was popular with the lower classes and Kevin was never well-perceived by his betters. The online discussion that followed the article did not contain, as it might in Britain or America, an angry rejection of this tendency to isolate and marginalise the Kevin, although it did include a handy list of other, equally cursed names, including Brian, Brandon, Jessica and Dylan. It didn't discuss whether this varies according to whether you're named after the American singer or the hippy rabbit from the Magic Roundabout.
Anyway, a novel has now been published in French which tells the story of how a young man improves his chances of being accepted into the intellectual salons of Paris by changing his name from Kevin to Alexandre. I'm not sure my own disqualification from those salons was ever entirely down to my name but it all feels like a timely reminder of the exclusion which now appears to be part and parcel of the life of a Kevin in the Francophone world.
I'd like to say that I just don't understand it. But then, of course, that's the curse of nominative determinism. Anyone called Kevin is destined to not quite understand anything. Join the conversation - find us on Facebook , Instagram , Snapchat and Twitter.
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