THIS mom has been slammed by her choice to name her baby something that could be mistaken for an expletive.
Whether taking inspiration from products or copying Elon Musk with a series of symbols, baby names are becoming increasingly eccentric nowadays.
![People hate my baby’s name, they think someone might make an R-rated slip of the tongue People hate my baby’s name, they think someone might make an R-rated slip of the tongue](https://www.the-sun.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2022/07/KM_BABYNAME_COMP1.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
![](https://www.the-sun.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2022/07/NINTCHDBPICT000748869560.jpg?strip=all&w=960)
Reddit users pointed out the unfortunate similarity between an expectant mother’s baby name and a part of the female anatomy[/caption]
But what happens if a baby name seems fine on paper but leads to an unintentional R-rated slip of the tongue?
A Reddit user shared a Facebook post that mentioned a very unique baby name.
The expectant mother posted a picture of herself and two young children, and captioned it “preparing for Claxton Crit to join the family.”
Reddit users were quick to roast the name that sounds dangerously close to a private part of the female anatomy.
“Be really careful to not say cl*t, I guess,” commented one reader.
Another person said they would struggle to pronounce the name, they commented: “I’d be accidentally saying Craxton Cl*t like a moron.”
Some Reddit commenters pointed out the unfortunate time that Claxton would have once he reached school age.
“My middle name is Virginia, and in elementary school the boys would always say v****a. It’ll happen, often,” said one user.
Another person wrote: ” Oh, that boy is gonna be bullied throughout all of high school.”
“I shudder to think what the girls’ names are,” one reader said.
Another user commented: “That sounds like a new STD.”
“Clraxton no-middle-name, because he’ll never find it,” joked another reader.
Other users pointed out that the name still has flaws even without the sexual innuendo.
“It sounds like a cat coughing up a furball,” said one reader, responding to the strange baby name.
Another person commented: “I only see ‘crit’ as short for ‘criticism.’ In academics like ‘Lit Crit’ for literary criticism.”
One user suggested the boy could be nicknamed “Claxton Critter.”