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I likeAlice Elisabeth
Alva Astrid Linnéa
Astrid Maria - but not Magdalena
Freia Engla Elisabeth - prefer Freja
Clara Astrid - but not Isabelle
Linda Irene - but not TildeAlfons Love Gustav - usually I don't like Love that much, but here it flows nicely
Alvar Nils
Arvid Oscar Alexander
Bastian Felix
Alfred Viktor - but not Carl
Also delighted to seeElsa
Saga
Klara
JuliaMathias
Erik
Axel
Sebastian
Vincent
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I like / love...Alice Elisabeth
Alva Astrid Linnéa
Elsa Jenny
Emilia
Ruth AlvaAugust Sven
Axel Isac
Bastian Felix
Bror Sighsten Esaias (Well, I like Bror anyway, only I thought it was super dated there?)
Carl Alfred Viktor
Elliot Sebastian
Gunnar Lennart
Jeremy John Gunnar (Probably a silly question, but are Jeremy and John pronounced differently in Sweden?)
Oliwer Tobias Vallentin
Olle Mikael
Oskar Karl Anders
Per Elmar
William Haldo Tage
Vincent Karl
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Bror is so dated it's starting to get popular again. ;)J is normally pronounced like Y here, so it would be "Yonn" and "Yeremy". It is possible they say Jeremy the English way though, it's not very common and still perceived as an English name. John is a lot more established as a Swedish name and thus less likely to be pronounced in English.
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Oh, well that makes me happy! As do "Yonn" and "Yeremy" - I think J's pronounced as Y's are fabulous, generally :)
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I like Engla and Tage, do you have any extra information on these names?
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Engla is a form of Engel, a German name meaning "angel" (it has the same meaning in Swedish as well, just with a slightly different spelling). It can also be seen as a form of the Swedish name Ingela, but the angel association is probably what made it popular.Tage (TAH-ge) is an old Danish name with the same root as the English word "take" (Old Norse "taka"), so it means "taker", which could be interpreted as something like "heir" or "bondsman". It was popular in Sweden in the first half of the 20th century, and has gotten popular for babies again recently, it entered the top 100 in 2011.
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Decibel? Just because it ends in -bel doesn't make it a good name...My favorites:
Alice Elisabeth
Astrid Linnea (don't care for Alva)
Emilia
Isabelle Clara Astrid
Siri Klara (don't like Klara and Carina together, though)
Paul
Mathias
Alexander
Tobias
WilliamThat's a lot of Arivds.
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I feel like I've seen quite a lot of Decibels in BAs ... There are only 74 in Sweden though, but with 9 different spellings. Decibel, Decibelle, Decibell, Desibelle, Desibel, Desibell, Dessibell, Dessibelle and Dezibell (from most common to the unique ones).
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