[Opinions] Re: Eva & Irene
in reply to a message by MariaNikolaievnaRomanova
I love Eva said EE-vah. Eva said AY-vah makes no sense and you'd be better off spelling it Ava. Irene is nice but you'd never get it said ee-RAY-nah. Irena is a better idea. AY-vah and ee-RAY-nah sound too similar for siblings to me.
Irena Charlotte, Irene Mathilde and Irene Camille are all really gorgeous.
Irena Charlotte, Irene Mathilde and Irene Camille are all really gorgeous.
Replies
Eva said AY-vah makes no sense and you'd be better off spelling it Ava.
It does make sense in any language other than English, and my inspirations Hedy Lemarr (whose middle name was Eva) and Eva Perón (aka Evita), both pronounced them 'AY-vah'. I hate the pronunciation 'EE-vah' as I think it's hideously ugly. Pretentious? Probably, but 1) I live in an area with a large immigrant population, most, if not all, of whose native language pronounce it as 'AY-vah', 2) I plan on living abroad after obtaining my Master's, and 3) In the eastern part of the state where my parents' families hail, an overwhelming majority of the people pronounce it 'AY-vah'.
Irene is nice but you'd never get it said ee-RAY-nah.
My grandaunt's name is pronounced that way and though she has to correct people, once they learn how to say her name, they're fine. Honestly, I don't see why the pronunciation issue for Irene would be any different than that of other names, kre8iv atrocities and decent names alike. My hypothetical Irene and someone else's hypothetical Nevaeh will have something to bond over in school. :)
It does make sense in any language other than English, and my inspirations Hedy Lemarr (whose middle name was Eva) and Eva Perón (aka Evita), both pronounced them 'AY-vah'. I hate the pronunciation 'EE-vah' as I think it's hideously ugly. Pretentious? Probably, but 1) I live in an area with a large immigrant population, most, if not all, of whose native language pronounce it as 'AY-vah', 2) I plan on living abroad after obtaining my Master's, and 3) In the eastern part of the state where my parents' families hail, an overwhelming majority of the people pronounce it 'AY-vah'.
Irene is nice but you'd never get it said ee-RAY-nah.
My grandaunt's name is pronounced that way and though she has to correct people, once they learn how to say her name, they're fine. Honestly, I don't see why the pronunciation issue for Irene would be any different than that of other names, kre8iv atrocities and decent names alike. My hypothetical Irene and someone else's hypothetical Nevaeh will have something to bond over in school. :)