This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: Maygen
in reply to a message by Getb2
Vowel sounds are often very fluid between regions, and people are also more willing to alter vowel sounds to create slightly different names.Megan is pronounced MEG-ən in most English-speaking countries, but I had to learn to remember this when I moved to the UK, as in Australia it's pronounced MEE-gən. The alternative spelling Meagan makes NO sense to me when pronounced MEG-ən, but it is pronounced that way. Maegan and Maygen are just further alterations of the main vowel sound, not different names.
Photobucket
http://wonderingchristine.blogspot.com/

This message was edited 2/23/2013, 1:41 PM

vote up1vote down

Replies

Megan is MAY-gən in the majority of the US. I did know a MEE-gən, but she was an anomaly and constantly had to correct other people's pronunciation of her name. MEG-ən is not a usual pronunciation, at least in the western US. So to me, Maygen and Maegan are nothing more than "phonetic spellings" of Megan.
vote up1vote down
I've lived in California my whole life, and MAY-gən is the usual pronunciation here. MEG-ən is hard for me to say because I'm not used to it.
vote up1vote down
Thanks Claudia! I'd only heard MEG-ən on US T.V. so I wasn't aware of the MAY-gən pronunciation being widespread.That pretty much confirms that Maygen is just a variant spelling of Maegan.
vote up1vote down
MEG-en is what I'm used to.Alexander is more used to it as well. I'm from the East Coast, he's from the Midwest.
vote up1vote down