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[Opinions] WDYTO Magdalene?
I kind of like it and I saw it was the name of the day. How do you pronounce Magdalene? Is it too religious?
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I say MAG-da-lynCan't say I would have liked it at all before but I can't find anything negative about it. Not sure if it'd ever make my list, but I wouldn't turn my nose up if I heard it used
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I love Magdalene. I would consider using it. I say it the same as Magdalen. I go to a church named for Mary Magdalene and that's the pronunciation the parish uses. If I want mag-da-leh-na I use Magdalena.
I prefer it with the -ne ending over Magdalen for purely aesthetic reason.My aforementioned church definitely gives it a pretty religious vibe for me. Very Catholic imo. That said, a lot if people have ascribed roles to Mary Magdalene that make her an almost controversial figure and some of that can make it seem more opposed to the establishment somehow?
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It's very pretty. I like it a lot and I also like Madeline and Madeleine. I wouldn't use it, first of all because the pronunciation isn't clear and then because everyone would automatically think of Mary Magdalene. I like it pronounced MAG-da-len.
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I've never liked it because I don't like the "Mag" syllable, the same reason I don't like Maggie.I would pronounce it MAG-da-lin.It does seem overtly religious, another reason I'd never use it.

This message was edited 5/1/2018, 1:32 PM

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I like it a lot, although I prefer Magdalena. It does strike me as very religious, but that doesn't bother me. I pronounce it MAG-da-leen. I pronounce Magdalena mag-da-LAY-na.
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Love it! It’s sophisticated, complex, and beautiful in a classic way. It IS very religious, but I don’t consider that a bad thing.
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I'd assume it was like either Magdaleen or Magdalena. I've never seen it irl, although I have come across Magdalen, which I think is nicer. But I vastly prefer Madeleine, pronounced mad LEN, to either.
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I pronounce it MAGdaLEEN, though I think that the correct pronunciation for it when it refers to "the Magdalene" ie biblical Mary is MAGdaLEEnee. Which is dreadful!I like Magdalen very much (MAGdalin) and Magdalene not at all. It's widely used in Afrikaans, so it's just another name really, with no special connotations.
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I say MAG-duh-len. I like it. It’s always had a strong feel about it, like Madeleine with more substance, and I don’t think it’s too religious.
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i like it a lot. the g and ee sound helps it sound way more appealing to me than Madeline (i use the English pronounication listed there, though i'd say it differently if i knew the bearer was European). i don't think it's TOO religious, but i'd assume the bearer came from a Christian background, or at least wasn't raised with a religion that would oppose the whole story the name comes from, since she's such a well known Biblical character. so i wouldn't use it.
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It's such a lovely alternative to the more common Madeline, I must admit Magdalene has been growing on me quite a lot recently. I especially love that you can use the nicknames Magda or Lena for someone named Magdalene and its variants
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I really like (bordering on love) Magdalene because it's heavy and somber and, for me, evocative of burgundy velvet. I don't think it's too religious.
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I get the same about the burgundy velvet. I was just saying to my partner the other day how one of the things I loved about our current favorite combo – Ingrid Magdalena — was the colors. To me the deep indigo of Ingrid with the dark rose red of Magdalena combines to make a beautiful swirl of both of those with some deep purple.
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I love it, but also don’t like that it’s more of a “title” than a name, at least originally. I also really like Magdalina.
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sameI feel similarly about names like Judith, Sabine, Doris.

This message was edited 5/1/2018, 11:19 AM

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What do you think of more modern names associated with places or occupations? I’m curious because I understand the hesitation but have come to see it as a name in its own right with all its post-biblical history. Also, I’m pantheistic enough that a place (or plant, or animal, or concept etc) lending its name to a human pleases me in an almost spiritual (or at least poetic) way.
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I'm more likely to expect word/place/occupation/plant/animal/concept names (although I wouldn't quite put Magdalene or Judith in that category: I guess that'd be Magdala and Judea instead) to be chosen with more thought to meaning (as opposed to just sound, popularity, and maybe history) than I would more traditional names...so then if they're not...like when people use Fletcher and don't even know what a fletcher does (or they do, but it holds no value to them)...it seems pointless/empty/superficial to me...but if they pick Arrow because they feel a connection to the symbolic meanings of an arrow, then...ok, whatever, I can respect that, and I like the sound, but it'd seem empty if I used it, because arrows just seem like a 2010s interior decorating trend to me.

This message was edited 5/1/2018, 10:44 PM

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