I'm [Asian] Indian and chuckled ? |
Please don't name your son "Harsh" |
Rishi is my favorite, and I'm Italian
Such a cute name! |
| Alkesh |
| Aditya |
This is a very old thread. In 2013 there was a Native American poster was upset about the use of the word "Indian" to refer to South Asian Indians, who posted a lot of things like "go back to your country" and hijacked every thread like this by posting Native American names. |
| Anyway, finding Indian boy names that work well in the US is hard. I like Vivek but my husband doesn't. |
I have a friend with this name, but people do have significant difficulty pronouncing it. |
| Om, like Om puri the actor |
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i love
kiran devan krisna (prefer this old spelling) milan gautum and my personal favorite is siddhartha, but my husband totally would never have gone for it. well, we had girls anyway.
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Ankit
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The hol indias sexes name is ANKIT
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| One of my students, who is named, is named Ishaan. I love that name. |
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South Asian here: choose a name that can be pronounced by the average American. Otherwise it will end up being bastardized in some way and will not resemble the name you selected.
I have a pretty easy name to pronounce but even my name gets mispronounced with different emphasis on various letters. It does not bother me but I am glad that it was not a more unusual name. Also, be wary for names that end up becoming a joke in the context of living in the US or the West. For example, I know someone whose last name is "Dixit" - which is not an uncommon name in India - but he had hell when he was in school with other kids pronouncing his name as "dick-shit". BTW, I am not sure if the last name spelled "Dixit" is itself not a modification from the way it used to be spelled which was "Dikshit" - and the latter was changed for obvious reasons. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dikshit |
What would the Indian pronunciation for this be? I have always loved the way it sounds in my head, but I have heard some people say "Mill-uhn," which doesn't appeal to me so much. (Actually, as the American partner in our relationship, I get chided for pronouncing the "a"s in many Indian names as "aw" instead of "uh". And often this small difference turns my liking for a name into ambivalence.) |