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[Facts] Re: What name is pronounced "Mah-ree"?
Marie is also pronounced that way in Britain sometimes. We say Marie-Claire "Marry-Claire" not "Ma-REE Claire", and I've known several women named Marie who say "Marry".Some people, technically incorrectly, pronounce Mhairi and Mhari with an 'M' sound too. I've known more than one Mhari.♥Elinor
If Britons were left to tax themselves, there would be no schools, no hospitals ... Just a 500-mile-high statue of Diana, Princess of Wales.

This message was edited 8/19/2008, 2:50 AM

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Thanks! What is the difference between Mhairi and Mairi; I take it the 'mh' is pronounced like a 'v'? Is one more traditional than the other, or are they just regional variants, do you know? (I'm having a surprisingly hard time finding this out!)I'm British too, although I've never met any "Marry" Maries. I do say "Marry-Claire" for the magazine, but that's how it's pronounced in French as well (it's sort of treated as one word, so the stress goes on the end syllable, Claire). Interesting... Although I was actually looking for a name sounding like "MAH-ree", not "Marry" - the first syllable rhyming with 'car' :)
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Mhairi is the vocative case of Mairi. Native Gaelic speakers wouldn't use Mhairi as a given name, only in its proper grammatical context. But it's been widely adopted by non-Gaelic speakers as a 'different' name, an alternative to Mary I suppose, which everyone was getting bored of :)Ohh, I see what you mean about MAH-ree being different from 'marry'. Hmm. I can't think of one though...
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