View Message

[Opinions] Anna and Annika
If you have a niece named Anna (husband's brother's daughter) and you are close/see them alot, is the name Annika considered off limits since it is a form of Anna in another language and basically sounds just like Anna with 'ca' at the end? TIA!
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Since you're so close to them, I wouldn't do it. BTW, my dd is Anna (pr. AH-na) and one of her nns is Annika (the other is Annie -- AH-nee).You could always ask, though. My sister has a dd named Emily and her s-i-l asked permission to name HER dd Emma. Lisa granted it, mainly because Kristen asked first before doing it. Who knows? It may work for you.

This message was edited 6/5/2010, 1:24 PM

vote up1
I don't consider it to be off-limits. I really don't care about name variants in other languages and I prn Annika like AH-nih-kuh, so they aren't all that similar.
vote up1
No ther's no problem calling her Annika.
vote up1
Well, since there is a chance of Anna going by Annie or even Annika, and Annika going by Anna or Annie, I'd say avoid it. If they were certain to only use their full names all the time, then it would be alright, but since you don't know what Annika will want to go by, I wouldn't use it.
vote up1
No, Annika isn't off limits. But maybe that is just me because Anna and Annika are both common names where I live.

This message was edited 6/5/2010, 8:56 AM

vote up1
I don't think so. If you plan on calling her Annika without a nickname, I don't see the problem.
vote up1
I would ask the family's opinion.
vote up1
Agree. Some people might like it that you want to name your daughter after their (even if it's not really so).
There are plenty nieces and children named after their parents, grandparents, aunts/uncles, so why not a cousin named after a cousin (I do know one such case, but the elder cousin is 25 years older).
vote up1
Exactly. I think they would be too close, but if you love it and can't stand not using it, just ask them what they think.
vote up1