| At*^ |
Flavia and Flavio are extremely common names in Brazil. Unless you have Brazilian heritage, it seems extremely try-hard to me to name your child that. I say that as a Brazilian. It's like the super pretentious, super not-at-all Italian or Greek lady in my town who named her daughter Cosima. |
| Flavia is also a mineral water brand in Italy (search acqua Flavia) |
| I like Andrea best of the ones you mentioned. |
Yes but there's a fine line between tragedeigh and judgment. We should just let people do what they want to do and not make assumptions about them or the families. We think the variant "Cady" is classy but not "Marleigh"... like who are you, or me, to say? I don't mind Heather, Sarah or Jennifer if it's what you love. But don't $h*t on other peoples' name choices, especially when they have the audacity to be from another culture (how dare they). |
| I don’t like any of them. |
| Andrea is lovely. |
| I know a Nayeli and have never heard anyone mispronounce it. But we live in a diverse area where people are used to Spanish names. If mispronunciation is a concern I feel like Andrea is more likely to be pronounced not the way you like it. |
How else would you pronounce it? Aahn - dree - ah? Every Andrea i’ve known (granted only 3) are Ann-dree-ah |
Flavia is an established name in Latin America. It’s fairly common for millennials in but less so for younger generations. It means golden. I think it sounds nice and fits right in with the popular sounds L and V sounds of today’s baby names like Olivia, Ivy, Layla and Aria. |
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Nayeli isn’t a tragedy, it's a Latina name and OP said she’s Mexican-American. With her background, it’s a perfectly normal and lovely choice.
Flavia should be the mother of a Roman Senator, so hard to think of it as usable for a modern baby. Andrea is fine. Solid and the most white sounding, if that’s a consideration either way. |
| gently - none are great |
Flavia is pronounced Flah—vee—Ah It sounds nothing like Flava Flav |
I mean “nay” means no. |
| Nayeli is super pretty. |