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OP, I would choose a nickname that emphasizes the correct pronunciation of the full name, since that's a concern (and a valid one, I think). If you're worried that Key-are-a will be pronounced Chee-are-a, then pick something that has the Kee sound.
Kiki (not my taste, but YMMV) Kia Kee |
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I don't think Chiara is a name that naturally shortens to anything. It's not like naming your kid Michael and not liking Mike.
Or Christopher and not liking the name Chris. That's just a really dumb thing to do in this country. Sorry PP. |
| Find another name. |
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In Italian this is a two-syllable name, not a three-syllable name: KYA-rah
You could nickname a child Ara or Aria. I really dislike Kiki. Ugh. |
| There's also a good possibility that her nickname won't be derived from "Chiara" at all but from some random incident from childhood. |
no too GOT. |
So you already were Jenn with two Ns. I think that's different. |
The point is, it's pronounced the same. She gave me a nickname in order to distinguish me from the other Jen. |
+1. My cousin is an Elizabeth, never a nickname. She also named her kids long, really commonly nicknamed classic names (similar to Benjamin, Christopher) and insists they be called the full names as well. Someone accidentally calls the kid Ben because we know a zillion little Bens and SHE gets annoyed because we didn't stop to remember her preference in casual conversation. It comes across as pretentious and insufferable. Call the kid whatever you want and we'll do our best to follow your wishes, but don't get bent out of shape when people forget. This is more about the parent's character and attitude towards others than the kid's name, IMO. |
I think that the teacher calling you Jenn-with-two-Ns, when you were already going by Jenn (with two Ns), is different from the teacher telling a Katherine who does not go by Katie that the teacher is going to call her Katie. |
+1, my name is Nikki, when my little brother and sister were young, they called me Kiki, because they couldn't say the "n"...kiki was easy for toddlers. |
I'm Jessica and there's always been lots of Jessicas. My name was shortened to Jess by teachers, not by me, to distinguish from the other Jessica. You're shocked now, right? |
| I was one of three Jennifers in a math class that also had four Michaels and four Kevins, two of whom also had the same surname. No one got mortally offended or had their sense of identity shaken because we were Jen/Jenny/Jennifer for that part of the day, or Big Kevin/Little Kevin. Otherwise it was literally Jennifer A, Jennifer B, and Jennifer C, which is hardly any better. And if you have two kids named Kevin Jones, what else is the teacher supposed to do? We all recognized the amusing absurdity of the situation on that roster and rolled with it. |
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A few options:
Ara Ari Ki (like key) Kiki (cute when she’s little, not so much when she’s older) If it was my kid I’d go with Ari |
| I went to a school with a girl whose name was Meg. Actually on the birth certificate Meg. And we had at least 2 teachers growing up that would insist on calling her Megan because they didn't call anyone by nicknames. The poor girl told them over and over and over again that her name was actually Meg. It just doesn't seem that hard to call someone what they ask to be called. |