No I meant it like you interpreted it, “Timmy” and “Benny” are names that you would clearly associate with children rather than adults. And my impression is that Kevin is also in that category, though perhaps it’s not as extreme a case as those two names. I never understood why parents would call their son Benny, why not officially call him Ben and use Benny in the family as long as he’s a kid and doesn’t mind?
No one ever heard of Benny the mighty conquerer or Benny the badass CEO. Benny is a cute name, not a serious name for a grown man. Kevin may be perceived differently in America, perhaps because the name is older there while in Germany it’s indeed a rather new name...
I suppose he means its a newly introduced name.
That’s one interpretation, but I certainly wouldn’t have used the phrasing he did if I meant to convey that meaning.
When think “A name for children,” I think of variations on ordinary names which people usually grow out of, like “Timmy.”
No I meant it like you interpreted it, “Timmy” and “Benny” are names that you would clearly associate with children rather than adults. And my impression is that Kevin is also in that category, though perhaps it’s not as extreme a case as those two names. I never understood why parents would call their son Benny, why not officially call him Ben and use Benny in the family as long as he’s a kid and doesn’t mind?
No one ever heard of Benny the mighty conquerer or Benny the badass CEO. Benny is a cute name, not a serious name for a grown man. Kevin may be perceived differently in America, perhaps because the name is older there while in Germany it’s indeed a rather new name...
http://www.freakonomics.com/2009/10/22/kevin-is-not-a-name-its-a-diagnosis/
...and oddly enough all the Kevins I remember from my old school years were always the class clown.
On the other hand, there is Benny the Jet.