Re: Next lot of calisthenics champions
in reply to a message by Amphelise
Alicia - very good; love the spelling; still prefer Alice
Brylee - incomprehensible
Cadence - mildly amusing
Clare - hurrah! I'd use it IRL in spite of the sound of it in one of our local dialects
Heidi - very pleasant
Isla - not a favourite; trendy; Islay is slightly more interesting
Kayla - probably OK as a nn for Mikayla, which itself isn't as good as Michaela
Lucy - my all-time favourite, next only to Laura
Madeline - a very nice spelling of a classic favourite
Matilda - Advance, Matilda fair! We had a wonderful Matilda dog, and Tilly is a good human nn
Mia - so trite, so trendoid, so feeble compared to Maria. What a pity
Minasha - wow! Combo of, perhaps, Miranda and Ashley? I don't like it, but it is interesting
Pheobe - probably the parents' typo, not yours! Sounds silly, looks wonderful, the only one I've known has recently transsexed into Adrian
Rebecca - lovely; even Becky is OK
Shylah - no, really, this is unnecessary when Sheila exists and is beautiful. Who wants to be shy all her life?
Taylor - don't like lnfns; don't like occupation names either
Addison - and I quote: "From an English surname meaning "son of Adam". Its recent popularity as a feminine name stems from its similarity in sound to Madison." Which says nothing about the popularity of Madison ...
Alina - nickname morphing into full name; quite pretty
Alyssa - far, far prefer Alicia, to which I also prefer Alice
Emma - trendy and tedious; even Jane Austen couldn't save it
Hailey - I prefer Hayley; I'd rather start with Hay than with Hail, but I don't enjoy lnfns anyway
Isla - as above
Mabel - I like it very much, and was disappointed when a school friend used her mn, Leigh, rather than her fn, Mabel
Mackenzie - no, no and no again
Madeline - as above
Noi - interesting, and quite a conversation piece!
Quinn - Come all without, come all within, you've not seen a thing like the mighty Quinn
Sophia - if soFIEa, beautiful; if soFEEa, disappointing
Summer - more of a word than a name; better than Spring
Tessa - lovely, happy, lively name: I got a puppy once who looked like a boy in my class named Altus, and I thought of Son Altesse and named her Tessa: her namesake was proud and honoured, and now, years later, my son's Scottie is Tessa again.
Brylee - incomprehensible
Cadence - mildly amusing
Clare - hurrah! I'd use it IRL in spite of the sound of it in one of our local dialects
Heidi - very pleasant
Isla - not a favourite; trendy; Islay is slightly more interesting
Kayla - probably OK as a nn for Mikayla, which itself isn't as good as Michaela
Lucy - my all-time favourite, next only to Laura
Madeline - a very nice spelling of a classic favourite
Matilda - Advance, Matilda fair! We had a wonderful Matilda dog, and Tilly is a good human nn
Mia - so trite, so trendoid, so feeble compared to Maria. What a pity
Minasha - wow! Combo of, perhaps, Miranda and Ashley? I don't like it, but it is interesting
Pheobe - probably the parents' typo, not yours! Sounds silly, looks wonderful, the only one I've known has recently transsexed into Adrian
Rebecca - lovely; even Becky is OK
Shylah - no, really, this is unnecessary when Sheila exists and is beautiful. Who wants to be shy all her life?
Taylor - don't like lnfns; don't like occupation names either
Addison - and I quote: "From an English surname meaning "son of Adam". Its recent popularity as a feminine name stems from its similarity in sound to Madison." Which says nothing about the popularity of Madison ...
Alina - nickname morphing into full name; quite pretty
Alyssa - far, far prefer Alicia, to which I also prefer Alice
Emma - trendy and tedious; even Jane Austen couldn't save it
Hailey - I prefer Hayley; I'd rather start with Hay than with Hail, but I don't enjoy lnfns anyway
Isla - as above
Mabel - I like it very much, and was disappointed when a school friend used her mn, Leigh, rather than her fn, Mabel
Mackenzie - no, no and no again
Madeline - as above
Noi - interesting, and quite a conversation piece!
Quinn - Come all without, come all within, you've not seen a thing like the mighty Quinn
Sophia - if soFIEa, beautiful; if soFEEa, disappointing
Summer - more of a word than a name; better than Spring
Tessa - lovely, happy, lively name: I got a puppy once who looked like a boy in my class named Altus, and I thought of Son Altesse and named her Tessa: her namesake was proud and honoured, and now, years later, my son's Scottie is Tessa again.
Replies
Minasha is an Indian name, and Noi appears to be Thai.
Thank you for that - most interesting!