How to Name Characters Faster

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  • Опубликовано: 8 мар 2022
  • It can be hard to name characters in your story, but it doesn't have to be. Names follow fairly simple conventions, like how English names are usually organized with a first, middle, and last name. The characters in your novel might not use that naming system, but it's likely they'll have some kind of consistency, and establishing a way to name characters might help you out in the long run!
    Script and VO by Adam Bassett
    Animation by Cole Field
    #names #writingcommunity #authortube #writingadvice
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    -References-
    A [2006] Guide to Names and Naming Practices: www.fbiic.gov/public/2008/nov...
    More about the names of people and their titles in Chinese history: www.chinaknowledge.de/History/...
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Комментарии • 27

  • @AroundTheCampfire
    @AroundTheCampfire  Год назад +4

    Hey, thanks for watching this little video on naming systems! ❤We followed it up with another video on names, taking a look at precisely the things I ignored this time-examples of names chosen for their meanings (among other things). You can check it out here: ruclips.net/video/10Pbqiw1V20/видео.html

    • @AroundTheCampfire
      @AroundTheCampfire  Год назад

      @@caitlyncarvalho7637 Charlotte Webber is freakin' hilarious. 😂
      I think the "line" is dependent on what you're writing. If you're writing something very serious the audience's tolerance for obvious puns or meanings in names might be lower. If you're writing something more lighthearted, they might be expected. I know I rattle on about naming systems in this video here-and I do believe in them-but I also think that we put too much concern on a character's name in general. Whatever you tell readers, they're likely to accept, so long as it makes sense in the context of the story.

  • @Ryak1234
    @Ryak1234 2 года назад +60

    I would also recommend picking names with different first letter for different characters. So naming the hero Jack and the antagonist Jake might not be ideal.

    • @AroundTheCampfire
      @AroundTheCampfire  2 года назад +13

      Yeah, absolutely! This is a common suggestion I give folks as well. It's not uncommon for people to be in the same group with similar or the same exact names-but it can be hard for the audience to discern between them. It's a really easy way to improve clarity on the page.
      -Adam

    • @VABJMJ
      @VABJMJ 5 месяцев назад +1

      You could get around this by giving them nicknames. As in, you can actually have two Johns in a team but they call one of them something else for clarity lol that happens all the time in real life.

  • @PhoenixCrown
    @PhoenixCrown 2 года назад +22

    Love this idea. I have a nomadic race that I had [Personal Name] + [Family Name] + [Tribe Name], and I'm going to move the tribe to be first because that makes a lot of sense. They would be more recognized by their tribe!

  • @basedoppenheimer1497
    @basedoppenheimer1497 2 года назад +18

    I am a masochist. My story involves with characters with intricate surname systems and a religious culture and I always look up names and their meanings, though I usually end up using one I like how it sounds depending on the character more so than what it means.

  • @123TheMpoMan321
    @123TheMpoMan321 2 года назад +29

    I'm just a fan of whatever sounds nicest.
    Like Kevin. That name always sounds amazing. In absolute any genre. Especially fantasy.

    • @kevingrundhofer5135
      @kevingrundhofer5135 2 года назад +7

      I agree.
      Michael’s a great name too. In fact one of my primary characters is named Michael. 😁

  • @newguy7209
    @newguy7209 2 года назад +4

    This thumbnail is just... *chef's kiss*

  • @hectorvivis3651
    @hectorvivis3651 2 года назад +3

    Good short video, with a reference in the description to go further.
    Very nice!

  • @Lukandon
    @Lukandon 2 года назад +6

    I like the emytology method. It's easiest and works well for me I think.

  • @writerducky2589
    @writerducky2589 Год назад +2

    I mostly like to just use names I think sound good. If the meaning fits their life and story too, bonus.
    Sometimes I do try to come up with something with meaning too, such as giving a character the surname Shepherd because he's a leader and someone who cares for others, contrasting other family members who do not "live up to their name" as it were.
    But perhaps most importantly I try to make sure the names used in a given region sound like they belong together, and if a name sticks out, that there's an in-world explanation that addresses this, regardless of whether or not it shows up in the narrative.
    Unless it's a multicultural setting, in which case you do want different sounding names to some degree.

  • @Littlepup93
    @Littlepup93 Год назад

    Such a nice quick video that raises some really good things to consider!

  • @kevingrundhofer5135
    @kevingrundhofer5135 2 года назад +6

    Kevin!!!
    LOL 😂

  • @hellhound1744
    @hellhound1744 Год назад +1

    I often like to use names to hint for the story or names tha fit them from meaning because of like they were named by gods or they earned there name or something connected to there past. Making there name, a name with history and backstory to just why they have that name

  • @jonathanmong4927
    @jonathanmong4927 21 день назад

    You missed an aspect of Chinese names. A lot of Chinese names have three characters: surname - generational name - personal name, where the generational name is shared either by all cousins on one side of the family or by all siblings in one nuclear family.

  • @ShadowWolve-fx1rm
    @ShadowWolve-fx1rm 4 месяца назад

    Mikayla is my sister and she has lots of ways to spell her name like Makayla

  • @anthemofink
    @anthemofink Год назад +1

    RIP Kevin

  • @Lyrya
    @Lyrya 2 года назад +1

    When I pick a name, I try to stay in the logic of the race/culture of the characters and sometimes it's hard since I copied a little some of ours past cultures. One of my elves races is close to the english-celtic era (with druids and multiples gods) so I looked for names from that period of time but in the end I didn't like them much and since I wanted a feel of mystery/out of this world, I had to come up with an another idea. So I searched dictionnaries of old langages (and some comtemporay too) and I picked a word or two which could describe my characters, changed some letters and it works !
    But I never tought about the last name and the meaning of its placement, so I'll have get to check that ! Thanks for that, cause, when I think about it, all my races have the same pattern and it might not be the best for immersion ^^

  • @KingTai64
    @KingTai64 2 года назад +1

    Franielle is a very uncommon name that isn't used very often. I use the internet when naming my characters. But if I'm making a language, then my characters name should home in from that language.

  • @fuzzywuzzy17
    @fuzzywuzzy17 Год назад

    Naming my characters is so hard for me. I'm writing a story that has a fantasy norse genre to it with different races. I end up using name generators to get inspiration for names

  • @gal749
    @gal749 Год назад

    My fictional Yé have a pretty simple naming system of optional title (queen, chief, captain, ambassador, etc.) + personal name (regualrly derived from a noun) + family name (regularly derived from an adjunct), the latter being inherited with a system of class/gender shenanigans.

  • @Dragoknight-gx3ke
    @Dragoknight-gx3ke Год назад

    Video was great, but my name's kevin and I wasn't expecting a roast at the end.

  • @stagle51183
    @stagle51183 Месяц назад

    Just Bob, nothing else.