I heard a brief story on the radio this morning on how
naming your house will get you a higher price when it comes time to sell.
Quoting an apparently snobby realtor the reporter finished by cautioning you
should only name your house if it’s worth over 20 million. The realtor thought
it would be pretentious to name your house if its worth was below that.
Over the years I’ve named plenty of houses, but none of them
were my own. Growing up we knew most of our neighbors, at least their last
names, so their homes were always referred to by the owners. The original owners
could be long gone but we’d still refer to the house by using their name. If we didn’t know the owners we called the
house by a feature of the home or property. For example, there was a house a
few blocks away that was known as the fountain house because there was a
drinking fountain attached to an outside wall.
My sister Shauna and a friend found a home in San Leandro whose yard was
paved over. No yard, no grass, just pavement. Guess what we called it? Totally
original: the cement house.
When we moved into our new home the kids named several of
the houses in the neighborhood. There was Mustard Man’s house across the
street, named for the color of his house, not by what he put on his ham
sandwich. There was the angle house a few doors down due to the many corners
and angles the homes design has. Some houses were named because of events like
Dead Tony’s house. Tony was a single elderly man who was best known in the new
neighborhood for watering his weeds. He died shortly after we moved in. A second
man died in a house on a few doors down in the other direction. It became known
as the other dead guy’s house.
Naming a house seems like a charming thing to do. The last James Bond movie SkyFall was the
name given the boyhood home of the famous spy. In fact, there’s actually a website that will
help you come up with your own house name. Here’s a link: http://www.housenameheritage.com/default.asp
The site provides names of houses in various languages along
with some of their meanings. Somehow other languages seem to have one word,
that when translated into English, is actually an entire phrase. Because of
this many names of homes are in a foreign language, usually a very obscure
language. For example, the Zwengalii
word “Coluellala” translated into English means “the man in this house eats lots of pizza and
likes to sing funny songs to his children during the night of the full moon.” OK, I did just make that up but it sort of
proves my point.
On this website some of the best house names were of
Australian Aboriginal origin. There’s Alawoona: meaning a “Place of hot winds.”
Most likely named for the hot air that comes from the owners. Bundala means “A Large
Person.” If you lost some weight you might have to change the name. Culgoa:
meaning “a river running through it.” Probably named for a plumbing disaster.
There’s Edibegebege referring to “Plenty
of Fleas” a home I’m sure we’d all love to own. Then for the house with lots of hungry kids there’s
the name Maradana, meaning “animals
grazing.”
There’s also a Gaelic term, “Cairn” meaning” a mound of
stones marking a gravesite.” And there’s
the Latin: Nessun Dorma meaning “none shall sleep” that was found on a home
that was next to the train tracks.
Finally, here’s my personal favorite. In fact, I think I would
name my house this if only I knew how to pronounce it. It’s Maori- Titirangi.
The translation: “The Fringe of Heaven.”
A house name like that just makes you feel safe, secure and protected, a
place that would be home.
1 comment:
Thanks for the interesting post. Was the cement house the house we thought might be haunted? Also, since we don't know the names of some our neighbors, we have names such as Tattoo Man's house, the Marine's house, Motorcycle Man's house, Loud Mouth's house (we can hear him talking half a block away, and BMOT's house (her screen name on a local message board was Busy Mom of Three). What do you think our old San Lorenzo home is known as?
Post a Comment