Anonymous wrote:If you want it pronounced correctly, spell it Ada. I think of it like Nina. Coming back to the young'uns. Very pretty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can just hear the whole class roaring w/laughter at roll call in school.
Or everyone in the Dr.'s office in the waiting room....
Please...Pretty please do not subject an innocent human being to such torture.
Are you...very isolated or something? Do you have kids? If so, then a glance at their class roster will show that Ada is nowhere near cringe-worthy.
Yup. Not one kid today will bat an eye at Adah.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can just hear the whole class roaring w/laughter at roll call in school.
Or everyone in the Dr.'s office in the waiting room....
Please...Pretty please do not subject an innocent human being to such torture.
Are you...very isolated or something? Do you have kids? If so, then a glance at their class roster will show that Ada is nowhere near cringe-worthy.
Anonymous wrote:I can just hear the whole class roaring w/laughter at roll call in school.
Or everyone in the Dr.'s office in the waiting room....
Please...Pretty please do not subject an innocent human being to such torture.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love it but I'd use the English spelling for simplicity. It was on my short list had DC2 been a girl.
I like the Hebrew spelling better b/c the pronunciation seems easier to figure out. "Ada" would probably be called Aaaay-da instead of Ahhh-duh.
Anonymous wrote:All that matters is if you and her father love it.
We named our two boys and will name this soon-to-be-born girl after people we love whom we are not related to by blood. All of our kids have names that sound like they should be in a nursing home! But I look at my boys and cannot imagine them being named any other names.
Anonymous wrote:If its Hebrew, the accent is probably on the second syllable, like a-DAH. I knew an Adi (Israeli) and it was pronounced a-DEE, not AH-dee. Someone with actual knowledge of Hebrew should chime in.