Zoe rhymes with Joey. Sorry. I get that the umlaut is missing, but it's presumed and not needed in our language. |
Ha, right you are! "Zack and zoey" is a brand of dog gear. I'm cool with that. The spelling won't be the same and we're beyond dog people. |
And I know siblings who are Zach and Zoe. Their mom calls them "my little Zs" |
Aww, sweet! So we may not be original, but it's still pretty cute. Just as a question, what middle names have you guys heard being used? |
Why? People often worry about the popularity of names that they like and Zoe is often stated to be a popular name. I was surprised that we have not run into many other Zoes. |
I agree. You really are going to spend the next 18 years saying "it rhymes with Joe." |
+1 |
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In my experience while most people pronounce Zoe so it rhymes with Joey, a not insignificant number pronounce it as if it rhymes with Joe. But every name can be mispronounced.
In English, the dots are often termed dieresis, not umlaut. |
It's a diaeresis if it's supposed to show that you pronounce the two vowels separately: naïve, Laocoön, coöperate, reëlect, Zoë. It's an umlaut if it changes the pronunciation of the vowel: Brünnhilde, schön, Führer (when there's no umlaut, you write Bruennhilde, schoen, Fuehrer). http://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-curse-of-the-diaeresis |
| I like it, spelled both ways (nothing wrong with the Y imo) and think it's spunky AND smart |
Why would someone worry about the popularity of a name? Popular names are good, right? Who would deliberately give a child an unpopular name? That's nuts. |
My sister is a Zoe, no umlauts, rhyming with Joe. She likes her name and does not find it annoying. Normally I'd agree to just spell it the traditional way, but there's no other way to spell "Zoe like Joes". |
Surely it would be 'Zo'? |
Thank you for this. I'm the one having a baby soon named Zoe and I haven't once been asked "like Rachel Zoe" and don't assume that Zoe was always pronounced like "Zoey". Like I said, she's named after my husbands grandmother...who was born in the 1920's so it's not like it's a made up name. I have met other Zoe's (and Zoey's) and love both variations of the name! My name is very common and I still have to correct people on how it's pronounced, even though it's *very* common and not spelled weird (think along the lines of Rebecca) |
Plus 2' (love!!) |