Anonymous wrote:I actually like Taara because it promotes the "ah" sound - so you will be sure to get T-ah-ra instead of Tare-a.
My guess is that you're Indian?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I personally would add the "th" to get to the pronunciation you want. I don't think it's a hard T sound, if you are thinking about the Indian name. I would also keep in the 2 As; people will have an easier time remembering it's not pronounced 'tarah'.
At first I thought you were suggesting OP spell the name "Thara" or "Thaara"![]()
Anonymous wrote:I personally would add the "th" to get to the pronunciation you want. I don't think it's a hard T sound, if you are thinking about the Indian name. I would also keep in the 2 As; people will have an easier time remembering it's not pronounced 'tarah'.
please, as a PSA, please don't spell the name so that it is easier to pronounce. my parents did this with my indian name. it looks weird plus it still gets butchered.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm guessing Indian too, but even most Indians would spell it Tara when transliterated from the original.
True, but I know a lot of people who are changing the spelling of the names to make it easier to pronounce. For example Meera instead of Mira.
That said, to the poster after you who suggested using "th", I really disagree. In my mind there's a big difference between the Indian soft "t" sound and the hard "th" sound. Plus you risk people using the sound in the words "the" and "there", which I think sounds much worse than someone saying Tara pronounced the English way.
Anonymous wrote:fwiw my name is Tara (Tare-uh) and people have struggled with spelling/pronouncing my name my whole life.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Yes it is an Indian name meaning star and pronounced Tar-uh, not Tare-ah. I thought of the aa spelling to prevent people from pronouncing it Tare-uh.
Tare-uh just sounds too 80s and I just don't like the name. I know some people will mispronounce but I am hoping a phonetic spelling will help with that.
The hard t versus soft t issue is a puzzler for us. We want an Indian name and eliminating all soft t names, AND finding a name that is easy to pronounce AND has a nice meaning AND that we can both agree on is a toughie.
Taara - I would consider Tarra, Tarah or Tarrah to confirm the tar instead of tare. I think the extra a would lean more to tare vs. The extra r for tar.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Yes it is an Indian name meaning star and pronounced Tar-uh, not Tare-ah. I thought of the aa spelling to prevent people from pronouncing it Tare-uh.
Tare-uh just sounds too 80s and I just don't like the name. I know some people will mispronounce but I am hoping a phonetic spelling will help with that.
The hard t versus soft t issue is a puzzler for us. We want an Indian name and eliminating all soft t names, AND finding a name that is easy to pronounce AND has a nice meaning AND that we can both agree on is a toughie.