Is this name really that bad?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:The name isn’t “that bad”, but you’re definitely missing something here. While Stephen is an ordinary name, it is ordinarily pronounced as Steven. You can correct everyone’s pronunciation, but that gets old after a while, and some people will forget and still mispronounce it, and others will “correct the spelling” which will cause problems when paperwork and records get misdirected or misfiled. Moreover, if you get frustrated and make a big deal about correcting their pronunciation, they’re liable to think YOU are being melodramatic and juvenile about your idiosyncratic pronunciation of an ordinary name.

Eventually, your son will be in charge of his own introductions and he’ll have to decide if he wants to continue the hassle of having a conversation with everyone he meets or does business with about how to correctly pronounce his name in an unconventional manner that defies phonics or whether he’ll just simplify his life and accept the Steven pronunciation.


+1
He'll be Steve.


Steve. I work with a ton of Steves.
Anonymous
Stephen is pronounced like Steven.

Stefan is spelled like this: Stefan and pronounced with an f sound.

Do not use Stephen and expect it to be pronounced a different way.
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”.


English is a mix of multiple languages, so pronunciations aren't always the way they're spelled.

I have known 100+ Stephens and none have pronounced it Stefan. I have worked with Stefans though.
Anonymous
OP did err in sharing the name in advance, but since you are already there, you've been given a gift in terms of knowing what others will do (mispronounce or misspell) the name. That's a gift. Up to OP to fix it knowing its not just the family that will do this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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

What I said was in reference to the name Ciara, NOT Sierra.
Anonymous
Stephen is pronounced Steven. Nobody will pronounce it Stefan.

Even worse, kids will call him Stephanie if you call him Stefan/Steff.

He will undoubtedly opt to call himself Steve or steven—even if you name him Stefan.

Don’t do this to your kid.
Anonymous
It's like naming your kid Thomas but insisting everyone pronounce the TH sound. There's a logic there but reasonably, it's just not happening.
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.



In my experience Stephen is pronounced as “Steve-n”. If you want “Stef-an” you spell it “Stephan”
Anonymous
So bad. Awful.
Anonymous
With that spelling he will be called Steven. Please spell it Steffan and save the kid a lifetime of correcting people.
Anonymous
As everyone else has said, Stephen is a fine name. Pronouncing it "Steffen" is not. It makes you look either ignorant, like you didn't know the standard pronunciation, or affected, like you want to be special and condemn your kid to a lifetime of correcting everyone due to your own whims.

Please don't do this to your kid. Either pronounce it Steven like everyone else does, or spell it Stefan.
Anonymous
No one will pronounce it correctly unless you spell it Stefan.
Anonymous
It’s my brother’s name! But spelled Stefan. Friends call him Stef. I’m biased but I love it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Stephen is pronounced Steven. Nobody will pronounce it Stefan.

Even worse, kids will call him Stephanie if you call him Stefan/Steff.

He will undoubtedly opt to call himself Steve or steven—even if you name him Stefan.

Don’t do this to your kid.

He’d probably be more likely to be teased about being named Steve. Steve is considered kind of lame to the newer generations. It’s not quite ready for a comeback or old enough to be fashionable again. I highly doubt a baby born in this decade would opt to call himself Steve(n) if his parents named him Stefan.
Anonymous
The thing about naming a boy Stefan, but spelling it Stephen/Steven, is that every time he corrects someone with the correct pronunciation he will sound pretentious. No, it's Stef fen.
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