I like alliteration but I think Hannah Hastle sounds better than Hanna Hastle. |
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I don’t understand. You want to name her Hannah and pronounce it Anna? There’s about 0 % chance that anyone reading Hannah/Hanna will say it without the H |
I think OP meant hassle, as in this name thing is a hassle |
Why not name her Anna if that is how you want it to sound? |
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Omg people the Anna/Annie thing was an example to illustrate the sounds at play. She doesn’t want to name her kid Anna or have people call the kid Anna.
I like it OP. You’ll have to correct people, and so will she, but so do lots of people. After the first meeting people will get it |
| Wtf are you asking? |
| This thread is a mess LOL who’s on first Hanna or Hannah or Anna? |
Oh, I read it with a hard “t.” So a tough name all around. |
Wouldn’t that be Chana? |
| I know a Hannah who pronounces it Hahn-na. She corrects people (including me) and I've since learned to call her Hahn-na. No big deal. And I think it sounds nicer (though I'd agree people may find it pretentious unless there's an ethnic/cultural tradition). |
| As someone with a name that can be pronounced many ways (Andrea) it's really not that big a deal. The people in my life consistently know and use my preferred pronunciation. Other people default to whatever they're most familiar with. Or they ask me. I still know who they're talking to. |
this. correct them and done |
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My name is Julia. My mom insists it’s pronounced jewel-yah, with two syllables. Most people pronounce it Julie-ah, with three syllables. I never correct anyone and I completely don’t care.
If you name her Hanna you are essentially naming her Hannah, so make sure you’re okay with that. |
| My friend whose name is pronounced like OP wants is Chana. But that seems like even more of a hassle. |
*hastle |