I thought Aoife was Ay-fin, almost like with Aidan with an f. (but I could be wrong)
It's EE fa -- the Gaelic version of Eve. I knew an actual Irish person who named his daughter this, and yeah, sucked when they lived in the US, because it got butchered. Anonymous wrote:I like the Irish spelling for Owen. It's Eoin. Pronounciation is the same but it leaves people guessing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am annoyed by the increased popularity of Irish names for 2 reasons.
1) DH is Irish, as in off the boat a few years ago. And we did want to use traditional Irish names for our kids, but it's become too trendy. FWIW, we went with a traditional Irish name for our 1st DD, but gave it an Aglican spelling so people wouldn't massacre it.
2) People are never going to pronounce traditional Irish names correctly. I know a young kid name Colm who really wants to change his name to Collin because that's what people call him. I mean I love the Aoife, if we were still living in Ireland. But who the frick in the US is going to pronounce that correctly?
Love, love, love Nora. I wanted that for a 2nd child but DH said no. Now I cannot suggest for our 3rd because we already have 2 N names (not on purpose) and I refuse to use a 3rd N.
My favorite Irish name is Saoirse. Aoife is also beautiful. But you are right - destined to be massacred.
FWIW, I did not name my children Irish names. However, each of my kids is named after an ancestor, and we do have Irish ancestors. So my kids have Anglo and French names.
So how do you pronounce these names?
Saoirse=Seersha
Aoife=Eefa (kind of like Eva but with more of an 'f' sound)
(someone correct me if I'm wrong, I'm not Irish but I've heard those 2 names spoken before)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am annoyed by the increased popularity of Irish names for 2 reasons.
1) DH is Irish, as in off the boat a few years ago. And we did want to use traditional Irish names for our kids, but it's become too trendy. FWIW, we went with a traditional Irish name for our 1st DD, but gave it an Aglican spelling so people wouldn't massacre it.
2) People are never going to pronounce traditional Irish names correctly. I know a young kid name Colm who really wants to change his name to Collin because that's what people call him. I mean I love the Aoife, if we were still living in Ireland. But who the frick in the US is going to pronounce that correctly?
Love, love, love Nora. I wanted that for a 2nd child but DH said no. Now I cannot suggest for our 3rd because we already have 2 N names (not on purpose) and I refuse to use a 3rd N.
My favorite Irish name is Saoirse. Aoife is also beautiful. But you are right - destined to be massacred.
FWIW, I did not name my children Irish names. However, each of my kids is named after an ancestor, and we do have Irish ancestors. So my kids have Anglo and French names.
So how do you pronounce these names?
Saoirse=Seersha
Aoife=Eefa (kind of like Eva but with more of an 'f' sound)
(someone correct me if I'm wrong, I'm not Irish but I've heard those 2 names spoken before)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am annoyed by the increased popularity of Irish names for 2 reasons.
1) DH is Irish, as in off the boat a few years ago. And we did want to use traditional Irish names for our kids, but it's become too trendy. FWIW, we went with a traditional Irish name for our 1st DD, but gave it an Aglican spelling so people wouldn't massacre it.
2) People are never going to pronounce traditional Irish names correctly. I know a young kid name Colm who really wants to change his name to Collin because that's what people call him. I mean I love the Aoife, if we were still living in Ireland. But who the frick in the US is going to pronounce that correctly?
Love, love, love Nora. I wanted that for a 2nd child but DH said no. Now I cannot suggest for our 3rd because we already have 2 N names (not on purpose) and I refuse to use a 3rd N.
My favorite Irish name is Saoirse. Aoife is also beautiful. But you are right - destined to be massacred.
FWIW, I did not name my children Irish names. However, each of my kids is named after an ancestor, and we do have Irish ancestors. So my kids have Anglo and French names.
So how do you pronounce these names?
Anonymous wrote:Had a neigbor name their dd AshLynn - stripper, perhaps?
Boy in my son's daycare - Adonis. Setting his future Match.com dates up for high expectations?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am annoyed by the increased popularity of Irish names for 2 reasons.
1) DH is Irish, as in off the boat a few years ago. And we did want to use traditional Irish names for our kids, but it's become too trendy. FWIW, we went with a traditional Irish name for our 1st DD, but gave it an Aglican spelling so people wouldn't massacre it.
2) People are never going to pronounce traditional Irish names correctly. I know a young kid name Colm who really wants to change his name to Collin because that's what people call him. I mean I love the Aoife, if we were still living in Ireland. But who the frick in the US is going to pronounce that correctly?
Love, love, love Nora. I wanted that for a 2nd child but DH said no. Now I cannot suggest for our 3rd because we already have 2 N names (not on purpose) and I refuse to use a 3rd N.
My favorite Irish name is Saoirse. Aoife is also beautiful. But you are right - destined to be massacred.
FWIW, I did not name my children Irish names. However, each of my kids is named after an ancestor, and we do have Irish ancestors. So my kids have Anglo and French names.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sadly, it appears that many people do not like my cat's name. I'll try hard not to be offended.
The Laura/Nora thing got me thinking - I don't like girls' names that start with a hard 'G' sound - Gwyneth, Greta, Gretchen...all perfectly fine names, but they sound very hard to me. Nora also sounds "harder" than Laura (but not as hard as "Gora" would sound).
Funny - I love all three of those G names. I had them as options for our daughter but DH said no to them all. I'm curious about your cat's name, too...
The cat's name is Jasper. Named before the Twilight craze, not that it makes a difference, since it's just a cat. And she's even a girl, which would annoy me in a human (girls being given boy names), but for pets, I can overlook a lot.