View Message

[Opinions] Aviva
Wdyt of Aviva?
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Reminds me of the glucometer
vote up1
I love Aviva. It’s considered old fashioned in Jewish circles, (comparable to Pamela, Sharon, Carol in the US), but I quite love it.
vote up1
Pretty, I like it. Great for a child born in the spring.
vote up1
A long time ago, I read that Rita Dove named her daughter Aviva. That was the first time I saw the name, and I thought something like 'cool, how vivacious and original'.Then Ava got super popular. And now it seems try-hard. And probably more connected with Israel than I am comfortable with. But it's still vivacious.It also reminds me of Aziza, which is the name of someone I met in college and didn't like much. Aziza is cool name, though, objectively.I'd prefer Geneva.

This message was edited 3/29/2019, 10:12 AM

vote up1
I like it a lot. It has a vibrant, fun feel.
vote up1
Love.My husband dislikes it, otherwise it would have topped my list.
vote up1
Love, love, LOVE.It’s been a favorite of mine for years, it’s gorgeous!
vote up1
On English language baby name forums, this is the Maeve of Hebrew names.
vote up1
What do you mean?
vote up1
Hi !!!I think that she means that Aviva is similar to the toddler speech. As English-speaker babies pronounce earlier M-sounding names (like Maeve), Hebrew-speaker babies pronounce AV-names (like Aviva or also the Hebrew word for 'father').
vote up1
Actually, not at all! I meant that it's a foreign name that is CONSTANTLY suggested and loved on by English-speaking posters, while they would never be down for Deirbhile or Livnat. I saw a Swedish poster on another forum say that English speakers who say they like Swedish names really only like Freyja, and not names with more hard consonants. Names that fit neatly into 2010s English-language name trends.
vote up1
Okay! Thanks for the explanation. You are right.
vote up1
I knew an Aviva once. It was really cool to encounter in real life. I like the palindrome aspect of it.
vote up1