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[Opinions] Bryony
What do you think of Bryony?It feels very British to me. To the people who live there: how it it perceived there? Modern, classic, trendy, dated, tacky, boring, upper class etc. etc. how would you say it is perceived?To everyone: do you like it? Do you think it could become popular in the US? Or is it past its prime due to similarity to 80s names such as Brandy, Brittany, Bethany etc.?Bryony or Briony?
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I know a British Briony* (and an Ebony, which you might like too?)*she’s your typical working middle class mother. I think her kids are on a strict vegan diet.
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I like it, I've had a friend spell it Briohne
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The only Bryony I've ever met was, I guess, a late-1940s South African. It's a name I've always liked.
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It's not my favorite. Too prissy.
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It’s quite dated in the UK, I know two Bryonys and they’re both in their 30s.
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Bryony is so beautiful. I’ve loved it ever since I encountered it for the first time. I prefer Bryony over Briony.
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I've never met one so I just think of it as a flower name that's pretty uncommon in the US. It's a little earthier than a lot of other flower names. I'd put it somewhere between Briar and Betony in terms of general feel. I don't think it's in danger of becoming like Brandy, Brittany, Bethany etc.
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It's alright, a bit awkward. I prefer the Briony spelling.
I like Briar a lot more though, and Bryar for both genders.
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You are right, Bryony feels very, very British. Up there with Hermione and Jasper (imo).Now, normally I'm someone who sticks to traditional spellings (both because it's usually more convenient for the bearer, and often there's a reason it's the traditional spelling - i.e. it looks best), and I know that the plant's name is "white bryony," but... I do not like those double-Ys. It just looks so weird to me. That, and the Ys are pronounced differently (long-I, and then long-E). This is why I prefer the "variant" spelling, Briony (which is the spelling used in the movie Atonement).That said, I actually like the similar botanical name Briar more than Briony (which also kind of sounds like "briny" if you say it too quickly).

This message was edited 6/22/2020, 9:44 AM

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I love it, but I think it never became popular and never will because it sounds too much like Brian, which was popular for boys. I prefer the Bryony spelling. I don't have any particular association with it. I just think it's a pretty name.
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Don’t like the name Brian and Briony is just Brian with a Y.
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Bryony / Briony sounds very naturey to me without being an obvious plant name. I do not consider it particularly British, but it does seem like an older name that was never uber popular enough to become dated. I really like it but prefer the Briony spelling. I think it would work well on a modern girl, but the meaning is a barrier for it becoming too often used unless a well loved character is created with the same name.
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