Leto sounds hilarious xDDD No parent would name their child like that.

Atsushi April 23, 2019 2:50 pm

Leto sounds hilarious xDDD No parent would name their child like that.

Responses
    yuki April 23, 2019 3:14 pm

    The meaning count, stupid

    Atsushi April 23, 2019 3:51 pm

    Well as a Czech I don't quite agree, stupid ;)

    morning_dew April 23, 2019 3:56 pm

    I'm sure there are some Leto's out there in the world...I mean you even have parents naming their children cheesecake. XD

    Atsushi April 23, 2019 3:58 pm
    I'm sure there are some Leto's out there in the world...I mean you even have parents naming their children cheesecake. XD morning_dew

    Yeah but not in Czech Republic. This name wouldn't be even allowed by the government.

    morning_dew April 23, 2019 4:41 pm
    Yeah but not in Czech Republic. This name wouldn't be even allowed by the government. Atsushi

    Interesting, I'm very curious now. Why wouldn't it be allowed? Is there some sort of superstition to being named after seasons or does it just sound really bad in your language?

    tehanu April 23, 2019 4:53 pm

    when I think in English, it doesn't seem stupid at all, there are actually people named Summer but when I think in my mother tongue I get your point perfectly, no sane Turkish parent would name their kid "yaz". I don't think the author can be blamed for this though, there's really no way to check for this accept asking someone who is a native speaker of the language

    tehanu April 23, 2019 4:54 pm
    when I think in English, it doesn't seem stupid at all, there are actually people named Summer but when I think in my mother tongue I get your point perfectly, no sane Turkish parent would name their kid "yaz".... tehanu

    *except

    morning_dew April 23, 2019 5:35 pm
    when I think in English, it doesn't seem stupid at all, there are actually people named Summer but when I think in my mother tongue I get your point perfectly, no sane Turkish parent would name their kid "yaz".... tehanu

    It's the same in East Asian languages too, there are many people named after seasons or something relating to them.

    Atsushi April 23, 2019 9:44 pm

    It doesn't work this way in Czech though. Summer sounds perfectly fine in English, but it doesn't in Czech. And we actually have very strict guidelines when it comes to naming a child, you can't just name your kid however you please, it's like against the law and nobody would allow it.

    Atsushi April 23, 2019 9:51 pm
    Interesting, I'm very curious now. Why wouldn't it be allowed? Is there some sort of superstition to being named after seasons or does it just sound really bad in your language? morning_dew

    It both just sounds very bad and is prohobited. Like, there's an entire list of things you legally can't do when naming your child, and it includes using made-up names (Leto isn't a name in Czech, so it counts as made up), names that could make others make fun of you (e.g. names that sound vulgar or indecent), etc. You can't even name your child "Ivanka" like you could do in the US, because it's actually a short nickname in Czech and not an actual name.

    Atsushi April 23, 2019 9:57 pm

    I think it's cute he's Czech, but the name is ridiculous. Like, in real life it would never ever happen. I think every other Czech here would agree.

    yuki April 24, 2019 7:39 am
    It's the same in East Asian languages too, there are many people named after seasons or something relating to them. morning_dew

    Yeah, make sense

    yuki April 24, 2019 7:39 am
    It doesn't work this way in Czech though. Summer sounds perfectly fine in English, but it doesn't in Czech. And we actually have very strict guidelines when it comes to naming a child, you can't just name your ... Atsushi

    Wth, that sucks

    yuki April 24, 2019 7:41 am
    I think it's cute he's Czech, but the name is ridiculous. Like, in real life it would never ever happen. I think every other Czech here would agree. Atsushi

    Well sorry to call u stupid but some of ur country's law sounds stupid

    N!No April 24, 2019 5:20 pm
    I'm sure there are some Leto's out there in the world...I mean you even have parents naming their children cheesecake. XD morning_dew

    I answered question about names in Czech republic in different topic so I'm just copying my answer:
    First there is no tradition of using seasons (or other common nouns) in names. Only two names that I can think of are based on Spring (Jaro) and that is Jaroslav (translation is something like Celebration of Spring) and Jaromír (simply Spring + Peace). I don't know about any other names based on Summer, Autumn or Winter (Léto, Podzim, Zima in czech).
    Secondly parents in Czech republic cannot name their child in every way they want to because of laws of child protection. The rules are simple: The name have to exist in some calendar at the world (sometimes are recognized names of characters in books, TV series or movies); the name must be grammatically correct; the name cannot be shorter, longer or be composite of two or more names, it cannot be garbled, diminutive or homely (cute versions of names). If the name that parents select is very unusual they need an expert opinion - they pay for it to special office, the charge is 600-1100 Kč (around 26-48 USD so no big deal) and sometimes happens that the name is unauthorized and parents have to choose different one. Good example of how name should and shouldn't look like by czech law is Ivana and Ivanka Trump - Ivana is correct version however Ivanka is diminutive and not allowed. If Ivanka was born in CZ and not in USA she couldn't be named that way, she would have to have the same name as her mother Ivana. (Ivanka is version of name that you can call little child or someone really close to you like partner, sibling or best friend because it's infantile).
    There is no list of allowed names (because in the world is too many names) but there is list of unauthorized names - I did'n check it but I think that name Léto is not allowed (or it will be problematic to authorize Léto as a name) simply because it's not a name but noun.
    I hope I answered sufficiently comprehensive. :-*

    Atsushi April 24, 2019 8:56 pm

    Wtf we even used the same example (Ivanka), great xD Hope it cleared out everything.

    N!No April 24, 2019 9:24 pm
    Wtf we even used the same example (Ivanka), great xD Hope it cleared out everything. Atsushi

    Actually my mother's name is Ivana and I remembered situation when our neighbor called her Ivanka and she got really mad. She was literally screaming "Do I look like five year-old to you!?" It was hilarious - for us, not for our neighbor. :-D And Ivanka Trump is probably known around the world so she is good example. ;-)