Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 18:17     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Like the religion. Never heard it pronounced another way.

+1

I loooove the name Christian for a boy, but my Catholic-raised husband was having none of it. I'm a Unitarian heathen myself, but I love the way the name sounds.


Ha! I’m such a heathen that it didn’t occur to me that people would think a boy named Christian was more likely to be Christian. It’s not a name I associate with any particular religion, which I know is odd.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 17:54     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

I've never heard of the soccer player.

But I have a relative (by marriage) named Christian and he pronounces it like the religion. He goes by "Chris"
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 16:42     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Like the religion. Never heard it pronounced another way.

+1

I loooove the name Christian for a boy, but my Catholic-raised husband was having none of it. I'm a Unitarian heathen myself, but I love the way the name sounds.


Also a heathen who loves the name. Not sure what that says about us?
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 16:37     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Anonymous wrote:1st way since we speak English here.


That doesn't mean you get to change someone's name.

Or do you generally change Matteo to Matthew since we speak English here?
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 14:45     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

1st way since we speak English here.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 14:16     Subject: Re:Christian - the name, not religion

The Spanish-speaking-as-a-first-language kid in my son's daycare pronounces it like the religion. I like the name and I am also a Godless heathen, like PP.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 14:00     Subject: Re:Christian - the name, not religion

All in the context (I say that because it is pronounced differently in German and if I happened to be speaking in German or about a German with the name even though I don’t know any), but I would pronounce it by default like the religion. The name was certainly more common where I grew up in the South, but I don’t hear it much further North.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 13:11     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Anonymous wrote:Like the religion. Never heard it pronounced another way.

+1

I loooove the name Christian for a boy, but my Catholic-raised husband was having none of it. I'm a Unitarian heathen myself, but I love the way the name sounds.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 11:29     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Like the religion. Never heard it pronounced another way.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 11:13     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Like the religion.

If there were an -o on the end, I'd give it the four-syllable pronunciation.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 10:17     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Anonymous wrote:My Irish Catholic family pronounces it like the first example for my cousin. (I think it is a weird name to give a person)


It doesn't mean the same thing in other countries, only in English speaking ones.

For instance, to be christian as in religion in German is christlich, whereas the name is spelled the same as in English

So a lot less weird, IMO.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 10:15     Subject: Re:Christian - the name, not religion

Anonymous wrote:The former, but I’m not a Spanish speaker.

Speaking spanish isn't relevant.

Cristiano Ronaldo is Portugese, and the name Christian is pronounced in a similar way by many other languages (German, Czech, French, Swedish to name a few)
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 10:08     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

My Irish Catholic family pronounces it like the first example for my cousin. (I think it is a weird name to give a person)
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 09:59     Subject: Re:Christian - the name, not religion

The former, but I’m not a Spanish speaker.
Anonymous
Post 10/30/2020 09:52     Subject: Christian - the name, not religion

Do you pronounce it

Chris-chen (like the religion) or Chris-tee-ahn (more like Ronaldo the soccer player)?