Is this name really that bad?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:

So either change it to Stefan or get used to it being pronounced the same as Steven.



100%

you ARE naming your baby Steven. Make no mistake about it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Stevens (regardless of spelling) almost always become Steve (which was very common for men born in the 70s/80s). I wouldn’t want to be a 2026 baby named Steve. It’s not very fresh. Stick with your pronunciation, OP!

I was thinking the same. I work with a lot of them, so it will always be the name of a middle-aged man working a white-collar job to me. There’s nothing particularly wrong with it, but it’s just kind of bland.

I like the Steph Curry (as a PP posted called it) pronunciation.
Anonymous
I’m from the old school when Steven/steve was a popular name in the 70s. No way did we pronounce Stephan that way, ph is pronounced with the f sound. Don’t change the spelling.

https://youtu.be/MuBmTOBdHxc
Anonymous
Do PP pronounce the name Stephanie with a v sound, too? How about the word nephew? The letters “ph” together make an f sound. I have no idea why this name would present an exception to that rule. If someone wants their kid to be called stee-vin then they should spell it “Steven”.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean, because that's not the standard pronunciation.

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/pronunciation/english/stephen

So either change it to Stefan or get used to it being pronounced the same as Steven.


Based on the information given in the post, I think the OP’s mom is only pronouncing it the same as Steven because she hates Stephen, knows the OP hates the Steven pronunciation, and is trying to get them to change it to an entirely different name by annoying them with Steven.


Well, except that Stephen is an English name pronounced "Steven".

There are plenty of cultures that spell the name Stefan or Steffan and pronounce it the way OP wants to.

Note: there are names that have the same spelling and different pronunciations in different countries. Like Eva or Louis. But Stephen isn't one of them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I’m from the old school when Steven/steve was a popular name in the 70s. No way did we pronounce Stephan that way, ph is pronounced with the f sound. Don’t change the spelling.

https://youtu.be/MuBmTOBdHxc


Stephen, pronounced like Steven, is the older more traditional spelling. Steven is like Shawn or Jon. It's a newer pronunciation.

As to why? I don't know. Why isn't the Ch in Christopher or Nicholas pronounced like other the ch in other words? Names are like that. They have traditional spellings.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean, because that's not the standard pronunciation.

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/pronunciation/english/stephen

So either change it to Stefan or get used to it being pronounced the same as Steven.


Based on the information given in the post, I think the OP’s mom is only pronouncing it the same as Steven because she hates Stephen, knows the OP hates the Steven pronunciation, and is trying to get them to change it to an entirely different name by annoying them with Steven.


Well, except that Stephen is an English name pronounced "Steven".

There are plenty of cultures that spell the name Stefan or Steffan and pronounce it the way OP wants to.

Note: there are names that have the same spelling and different pronunciations in different countries. Like Eva or Louis. But Stephen isn't one of them.

It’s origins are Greek.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Do PP pronounce the name Stephanie with a v sound, too? How about the word nephew? The letters “ph” together make an f sound. I have no idea why this name would present an exception to that rule. If someone wants their kid to be called stee-vin then they should spell it “Steven”.


I mean there are lots of non-phonetic words/names in English. It just comes from being a language that comes from mixing two languages together plus 1,000 years.

Like if you name your kid "Sean" and expect it to be pronounced like "seen". Joaquin isn't phonetic either. Geoff is "Jeff". Chloe and Christine don't make "ch" sounds.

And that's not even getting into Irish names like Saoirse.
Anonymous
I knew that I couldn’t trust the judgment of a lot of my fellow Americans regarding pronunciations when I saw that many were pronouncing Ciara as “Sierra” or see-are-ah and Xavier as ex-zay-vee-er.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I knew that I couldn’t trust the judgment of a lot of my fellow Americans regarding pronunciations when I saw that many were pronouncing Ciara as “Sierra” or see-are-ah and Xavier as ex-zay-vee-er.


How else would this be pronounced?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I knew that I couldn’t trust the judgment of a lot of my fellow Americans regarding pronunciations when I saw that many were pronouncing Ciara as “Sierra” or see-are-ah and Xavier as ex-zay-vee-er.


How else would this be pronounced?

It’s supposed to be pronounced the exact same way as Kiera (keer-ah).

Not see-air-ah, not see-are-ah, not key-are-ah, not key-air-ah.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean, because that's not the standard pronunciation.

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/pronunciation/english/stephen

So either change it to Stefan or get used to it being pronounced the same as Steven.


Based on the information given in the post, I think the OP’s mom is only pronouncing it the same as Steven because she hates Stephen, knows the OP hates the Steven pronunciation, and is trying to get them to change it to an entirely different name by annoying them with Steven.


Well, except that Stephen is an English name pronounced "Steven".

There are plenty of cultures that spell the name Stefan or Steffan and pronounce it the way OP wants to.

Note: there are names that have the same spelling and different pronunciations in different countries. Like Eva or Louis. But Stephen isn't one of them.

It’s origins are Greek.


Yes, but in the same way that Jose is a name with Hebrew origins but is also a Spanish name. Stephen has Greek origins, but that particular spelling is a uniquely English spelling and is pronounced like Steven.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I knew that I couldn’t trust the judgment of a lot of my fellow Americans regarding pronunciations when I saw that many were pronouncing Ciara as “Sierra” or see-are-ah and Xavier as ex-zay-vee-er.


How else would this be pronounced?

It’s supposed to be pronounced the exact same way as Kiera (keer-ah).

Not see-air-ah, not see-are-ah, not key-are-ah, not key-air-ah.


That's not what the dictionary says: https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/pronunciation/english/sierra
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:He's going to have the world calling him some combination of

Steff-en
Steven
Steff-aaaahn

I have a name that's pronounced a million different ways and it's absolutely obnoxious. I wouldn't do that to a kid.


Agree. The world is dumber than you think. Change the spelling. Also, no one would have batted an eye if you hadnt revealed the name until after he arrived. Rookie move.
Anonymous
It must be spelled Stefan or you’ll get Stephen all your life
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