Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Alison
Elizabeth
Caroline
I actually think you could get away with it as a first name. I think people are familiar with how to pronounce it now thanks to the actress.
It would be a huge burden on a kid who lives outside of Ireland. I grew up with a Siobhan, and every year the teachers would butcher the pronunciation of her name at the beginning of the year. While I love Saiorse Ronan, she’s not universally known.
Anonymous wrote:Alison
Elizabeth
Caroline
I actually think you could get away with it as a first name. I think people are familiar with how to pronounce it now thanks to the actress.
Anonymous wrote:Anything that ends in a consonant or a y sounds okay to me. I like Margot Saoirse or Claire. One syllable is a bit easier on the tongue.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely Mary
Anonymous wrote:First, it has to be Irish or at least Irish-adjacent. You can't just throw out Saoirse as a middle name and use Emily or Serena or Danielle as the first name.
Something simple for a first name would be best. Mae, Maeve, Mary, Claire, Kathleen.
I agree that Saoirse makes for a better name, though. Then she could be Saoirse Mae, Saoirse Claire, Saoirse Mary....they all are better using the name you love as a first name.
As someone with a less well known Irish name myself, I can only say that it's not that bad. (I think Saoirse Niamh is lovely, myself, but your DH's head would probably explode to smithereens!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Niamh. Might as well have no one able to correctly pronounce.
How is this pronounced? (Phonetically)
Anonymous wrote:Niamh. Might as well have no one able to correctly pronounce.