It’s on my boy list fwiw |
They are pronounced identically .. Unless you are saying air-run vs. air-ren. |
I’m from northern Midwest. I’ve only known them pronounced the same. Ditto when I moved to DC 30 years ago. How are they pronounced differently? |
Kelly is still more of a surname abroad than a first name as I’m often reminded my Irish friends and acquaintances. We have both a girl cousin Kelly born about 15 years before our boy cousin Kelly. NBD |
Me too! I always thought that was a gender neutral name. |
I think the rest of the English speaking world pronounces them differently. |
The different pronunciation doesn't say air- for either. Erin would be a short E (Err-rin) and Aaron an open A (Aah-run) |
Hillary, Andrea, Jackie, Quinn, James |
Err is the urr sound .. never have I ever heard someone say Urr-rinn That sounds like Erwin not Erin |
Aah-run sounds like a British accent not a different pronunciation |
Perhaps it’s linguistic differences but I see a significant difference between “er-in” and “a-a-Ron.” |
I say Ear-rin and Our-rin. |
| I asked my son, Ryan, if he's ever been mistaken for a girl, and he said no. I'm sure the opposite is true for girls named Ryan. |
From New England and can't even conceive of pronouncing those names the same. |
Pop culture example: The first names for Erin Brockovich and Aaron Rodger’s are universally pronounced the same - I’ve never heard a difference in the press, news, interviews, etc… |