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OP here. Thanks for the feedback. We've decided to go with Mathias . Now to figure out a middle name.
As for spelling I appreciate the concern that it isn't authentic enough, but my FIL is Danish he spells his name exactly as I spell it in the OP and that's good enough for us. |
I knew someone in graduate school who spelled it like this. I think he was Austrian. |
Right? And no way could anyone named something as made up/misspelled as Condoleezza become Secretary of State or someone names Kimberlé become a famous lawyer and law professor. All those weird spellings and cutesy accents! |
No, of course they won't. That's because the Nobel Peace Prize is won by people, not by names. It is, however, entirely possible that a person named Ashlee, Jaxon, Kaleb, or Jordyn will win the Nobel Peace Prize. |
And lest people still keep insisting that the OP is making it up!!!!, here's the Wikipedia entry for Danish badminton player Mathias Boe: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathias_Boe |
I didn't say she was making it up. I said that I grew up (and still have) a name that isn't quite phonetic and it's freaking annoying. People always stumbling over your name, having to choose whether to correct people or not, and it being misspelled more often than not. If OP has strong feelings about keeping FIL's spelling, then so be it. But I wanted her to know it continues to be enough of a PITA to me that I wouldn't choose that for my kid. That said, it's a lovely name and a good choice. But a name that starts with "Math-" will be pronounced "Math-" 99.9% of the time. |
Yes, I know what "conventional" means. I am just saying you can't assume that your normal is the same as other people normal. |
Matthew isn't phonetic either. When my kids were little and learning to read, they would pronounce it Matt-hew. |
Sigh. It was joke. I don’t like cutesy names and spellings. It makes me wonder if the person knows how to spell the name properly or if they are saddling their kids for life with a name that sounds good for a three year old. |
Come on, how preschoolers pronounce things is not relevant. In English, Matthew is pronounced Math-hew and Mat(t)hias is pronounced Math-ias. Little kid speak aside, adults his entire life will pronounce the name the standard English way. |
| I know a Mathias, spelled with one T not two. I always think to spell it with 2 Ts; not sure why. It's a perfectly good name and not particularly confusing. |
| I know a Matthias, 21 months old! |
Sure, but some people have only heard the name used in the Bible, whereas Matthew is more common. Shrug. |
I agree. Mattias. Still honors grandad but it's an improvement. And get his birth certificate, OP...the granddad. Just to make sure. My grandfather spelled my mom's name incorrectly on hers. My grandma named my mother Adeline, and sent my grandpa to town to fill out the paperwork. He wrote down, "Addaline," as in, "add a line" which is what he thought my grandma said! |
| ^^sorry Op I didn't see your last post. Mathias it is! |