Andrei. I don't think Andre is pronounced the same. |
Andre pronounced Ann Dree
Andrei not even English Andrey pronounced Ann Dray |
Andre is either AA or European in my mind. I wouldn't find it odd for a white kid.
Andrei is obviously foreign but I would know how to pronounce ir. Andrey is a typo. |
Andrei is not a weird name, IMO. Foreign, yes, but not weird. In the same bucket as Alexei, Nikolai, etc. Obviously Slavic but pretty standard and not hard to manage a reasonable pronunciation. Now, names like Gleb and Bogdan I'd probably pass on. |
I knew a Gleb and he was exactly like you’d think a Gleb would be. |
All Andrés I know are french, not AA. SMDH. André |
I agree with Andrei. As as Russian speaker, I would say Andrei with the emphasis on the second syllable, while in the US at least i typically hear Andre with the emphasis on the first syllable. |
Do you know French people named Andre or André? To me, André is French but that’s as different from Andre as Andrei is. |
Andre doesn’t read AA to me. Andre Agassi comes to mind. He’s part Armenian/Ukrainian. |
I thought OP meant André but didn't know how to do the accent mark. Andre is pronounced Andrrrr. |
Same. Also, will this kid have an Eastern European/Russian last name? If so, that would make people not think AA. Many AA have French or British last names and I've never met any with a Russian last name. I googled how to pronounce Andrei and it's Ann dray e- 3 syllables. I like that spelling, but Andre is also nice. I personally like Andres, but that reads more latin. |
This exactly. Americans will mostly get the emphasis wrong but at least some people will know from the the spelling. If you spell it Andre, nobody will. |
what?? that's not how I'd pronounce Andre And a big NO on accent marks. They aren't on American keyboards. |
It's not 3 syllables. |
Eastern European here and I actually would have gone with Andrei in English. But Andrey also works. Andriy if they are Ukrainian.
The wild card is Polish, which is Andrzej |