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[Opinions] Johanna
I like the name Joanna very much, but vastly prefer the look of Johanna. However, as an English speaker, the pronunciation yo-HAHN-ah is not intuitive for me. I would pronounce Johanna as jo-AN-uh, like Joanna.Would that be feasible, though? I know that the character Johanna in "Sweeney Todd" spelled her name this way, but it's the only Anglophone example I can think of. Is it feasible in the United States to spell the name this way and say, "The H is silent"; or would everyone try to pronounce it the German/Scandinavian way, and think I was crazy not to just name my daughter Joanna?Please rate my personal name list:www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381
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I would think it was a bit lame if someone named their kid Johanna but pronounced it Joanna, honestly. That said, I actually like all three pronunciations:
yo-HAHN-ah
jo-ANN-ah
jo-HANN-ah
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agree with this.Johanna = jo-HAHN-na or jo-HAN-na to me
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I feel the same way about Johanna - I think the look is really pretty. When I was in school, there was a girl named Johanna but she pronounced it like Joanna. So, to me, it's workable. A potential downside is that Johanna will probably have to deal with people misspelling/possibly mispronouncing her name the first time. But, to me, that's an easy fix.
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I would automatically say jo-anna, like you. Most Americans would not pronounce it the German way.
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I would say jo-HANN-uh. That spelt either Johanna or Johannah is a widely used name in my husband's family (one or two per generation back to around 1750). I would expect a fair split between that and your preferred pronunciation. I don't believe the German/Scandanavian pronunciation would cross most people's' minds in the US.
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I live in the upper midwest US. As a kid, my best friend was Johanna. She pronounced it Jo-Hanna. Nobody ever thought to call her Jo-anna, but she did sometimes get mistakenly called Yo-Hahna (lots of Dutch names here).I've known several other Johannas of various ages, all Jo-Hanna.Tbh I think it would be rare that someone would pronounce Johanna without the h. To me it doesn't make any sense to do. That doesn't mean you couldn't do it, but it would be a pain to teach people. I think the vast majority of people wouldn't even consider Johanna could be anything but Jo-Hanna (or Yo-Hahna).

This message was edited 5/31/2016, 5:17 AM

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I'd be confused if I met a Johanna who pronounced her name like Joanna, I'd wonder why her parents bothered with the H for one thing. It would be very hard for me to remember that it wasn't pronounced with a Y sound. I can't speak to how American's would react, not being one.
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