Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Aaaand this is why there are a lot of Maddies out there.
This was a core requirement for our name search. If people argue over how a name is supposed to be pronounced, we crossed it off the list. Even if we loved it. Because that would make it worse, no? Loving a name and then having people regularly pronounce it differently? Or tell us we were pronouncing our own child's name wrong? No thank you.
No people like to give nicknames or sometimes there are two in the class. I would never cross a name off my list for " potential" problems with future people who may or not have trouble with my kids' names!
Anonymous wrote:I think it's odd when people named Jacqueline pronounce it Jacklyn, like on RHONJ
I'd that the "correct" pronunciation?
Anonymous wrote:Aaaand this is why there are a lot of Maddies out there.
This was a core requirement for our name search. If people argue over how a name is supposed to be pronounced, we crossed it off the list. Even if we loved it. Because that would make it worse, no? Loving a name and then having people regularly pronounce it differently? Or tell us we were pronouncing our own child's name wrong? No thank you.
Anonymous wrote:When did Madeline become Madalyn? Has it always been so? Is Madeline (with a LINE) only french?
I love Madeline (LINE) and strongly dislike Madeline said like Lynn.
Anonymous wrote:When did Madeline become Madalyn? Has it always been so? Is Madeline (with a LINE) only french?
I love Madeline (LINE) and strongly dislike Madeline said like Lynn.
Anonymous wrote:I have a Madeline and honestly we use both pronunciations!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Its not. Madeline is pronounced mad-e- LINE like you said. Madeleine, Madelyn and probably lots of other spelling variations are pronounced with Lynn ending. Like you, I prefer the name Madeline but it is often mispronounced.
Nope.
For the etymologists among us, Madeline really SHOULD be pronounced MAD-uh-lyn, not MAD-uh-line. This is because it is a French name originally spelled Madeleine, which, in French, is pronounced mad-uh-LEHN, and is then Americanized to MAD-uh-lin. The spelling Madeline would be pronounced (according to its French roots) as mad-uh-LEEN, which would, again, be Americanized to MAD-uh-lin. See Jacqueline, Catherine, Jessamine. The "English" pronounciation MAD-uh-line is actually a mistake taken from the Madeline books, in which the MAD-uh-line pronunciation was used to create a rhyming scheme.
Anonymous wrote:this is a really stupid argument. This name has multiple spellings and pronunciations, no one is "wrong" to use one or the other.