Someone on these boards recommended
Honor Leonie to me once. It's become my stock combo for
Honor ever since. I prefer using the English pronunciation here, "LEE-uh-nee," but French "LAY-uh-nee" flows beautifully as well.
I like a mn that is rather unusual with
Honor, otherwise it sounds more like a phrase than a name. Everyone knows or has heard of a
Sarah. So "
Honor Sarah" sounds like an invitation to a memorial service or something. Just something to keep in mind.
I've loved
Honor /
Honour for years. I first heard it as a minor character in "Upstairs Downstairs" in the 1970's. The series takes place in Edwardian
London (1900s - 1920s). It's so nice to see
Honor /
Honour make a comeback.
ETA: Oops. After re-reading your OP I see that you need fns, not mns, for
Honor. My bad. I got so excited.
Josephine HonorElisabeth HonorCelestine HonorMarguerite /
Marjorie HonorGwendolen HonorMuriel HonorIsobel HonorBarabal HonorMiriam HonorAbigail HonorJessamine Honor (2 nouns, but I don't think many people know what jessamine is, so it could work)
Rosalind HonorRosamund HonorGenevieve HonorClementine HonorEvelyn HonorCharlotte HonorParthenope Honor (Neopolitans might like this one)("par-THEN-uh-pee")
Eloise HonorLaurentine Honor ("-teen")
Judith HonorThis message was edited 6/3/2011, 10:00 AM