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Re: Callie
in reply to a message by Lily
I like Callie as a nn. It reminds me of my cousin Callie. It also reminds me of Laura Ingalls Wilder. I think it only happens once or twice in the books but I remember Pa called his wife Callie. I remember thinking it was weird since he usually called her Caroline or Ma and because I at first thought it was a misprint of Carrie since that was Laura's sister nn. But I could be misremembering, it has been so long since I read the books. Or it could have actually been a misprint of Carrie.It is my first instinct to pronounce Callie and Cali the same. Pronouncing Cali as KAY-lee would seem odd to me.I only like Callie / Cali as a nn. But I don't mind nn's like Callie as mn's though. I know it's very vintage to use nn's as full names like Nell or Nellie for example. I like a lot of vintage names but I almost never like nn's as names. I'm certain Callie can work on its own as a name, I just personally don't like it.Out of your choices I like Callista "Callie", but my favorite is Callisto "Callie".I prefer Callista over Calista. Calista just looks off to me.I prefer Callista over Calliope.I recently met a girl named Kallisti but you could spell it Callisti. The name is connected to the Apple of Discord. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_of_Discord#.22To_the_Fairest.22
I'm a big fan of the names Calanthe and Calanthia / Calanthea. I also like Calla. You could do Calantha or Calanthina. It's unusual as a name but Calamint also works.
Of course there is also Carolina, Carola, Carolyn, and Carol / Carole. I can't think of anything else and you already mentioned Calliope.
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This message was edited 10/4/2012, 1:04 AM

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Oh that must be why it's listed as a nickname for Caroline on this site! Calantha is pretty it could be an alternative for Samantha which is really common right now.
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I forgot to mention that my cousin Callie her first name is actually Caroline.I need to reread those books and make certain that I am right. Plus I should just reread them since I really did love them when I read them in middle school.But I found this: http://www.cslib.org/nickname.htm It lists Callie as a 18th or 19th century American nn for Caroline. I think it has been used a nn for Caroline for a long time. I can't find anything else about its origins as a nn for Caroline.I really like this list, it has some interesting nn's that I've never seen before.
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This message was edited 10/4/2012, 2:31 AM

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