Friday 2 August 2013

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections



Funny Black Girl Names Biography

Source(google.com.pk)
A twin brother and sister entered the world on July 12 and were bestowed these names: Knox Leon and Vivienne Marcheline. Considering they were born to a celebrity couple, namely Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie, these little ones dodged a serious bullet. Others born into the tiny victimized class of the celebrity baby have not been so lucky, and the wee Jolie-Pitts will surely be grateful if they ever share a sandbox with Freedom and Reignbeau, Ving Rhames’ children, or Pilot Inspektor, Jason Lee’s child, or Jermajesty, Jermaine Jackson’s son.

Ridiculous names: Sure, we all joke about them, but they’re real, and sometimes they’re illegal. In some places, the severity of the names has provoked government action: In Venezuela, a 2007 bill tried to limit names to an approved list of 100, with the intent of putting an end to names like Hitler Adonys and Batman. More recently, a New Zealand judge made the poor 9-year-old Talula Does the Hula From Hawaii a ward of the court, just so she could change her name. And a New Mexico court in June prevented a man from legally changing his name to “Fuck Censorship!”

That was probably a wise decision. But with creative names, as with all creative enterprises, there is wheat and there is chaff; all too often, the former is cast aside with the latter. And nowhere is this more true than with the particular case of names given to African-Americans.

That African-Americans have a tendency to buck more common names is obvious. Take a quick glance down the Olympic roster. It is the black names that disproportionately stand out: Tayshaun, Deron, Rau’shee, Raynell, Deontay, Taraje, Jozy, Kerron, Hyleas, Chaunte, Bershawn, Lashawn, Sanya, Trevell, Sheena, Ogonna, Dremiel. You can safely bet that NBC’s commentators practiced these a few more times in the mirror than the name “Michael Phelps.” And, indeed, black Americans have spearheaded and continue to lead the trend of creative naming in this country, even if they haven’t garnered as many headlines as Gwyneth Paltrow. Creative naming has reached every race and class, but “it is largely and profoundly the legacy of African-Americans,” writes Eliza Dinwiddie-Boyd in her baby-naming book “Proud Heritage.” Shalondra and Shaday, Jenneta and Jonelle, Michandra and Milika — in some parts of the country today, nearly a third of African-American girls are given a name belonging to no one else in the state (boys’ names tend to be somewhat more conservative). 


Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics Collections

Funny Black Girl Names Photos Wallpapers Images Pics       Collections

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