[Opinions] Aoife
I recently came across the name and I love it. For those unfamiliar with it it's pronounced ee-fa. I couldn't use it this area it would never be pronounced correctly (although it sounds great with my Irish surname. I am thinking of spelling it Efa, but I'm worried that it would be confused with Eva. Plus - despite both my husband and myself having Irish in is an Irish name we're not really connected with the culture. Still , I really love it.
Replies
I love Aoife. I worked with a girl named that though I never met her face to face. She worked out of the Ireland office, but we had to correspond a lot.
I think it sounds like a noise one makes when they're a) vomiting or b) sneezing violently
...or making a squeaky fart.
I like it, although I like the look more than the sound. I don't think you'd have to be Irish to use it, but you might want to avoid it in a place where you know nobody could pronounce it.
I don't like the look of Efa. I don't know if there are any other spellings I would like. Aefa? Eifa? Aife? Aifa? Ifa? Ifah? Iofa? Iofe? Eafa?
I don't like the look of Efa. I don't know if there are any other spellings I would like. Aefa? Eifa? Aife? Aifa? Ifa? Ifah? Iofa? Iofe? Eafa?
Hate it and always will.
I live in the U.S. If I had a daughter tomorrow she would be either Niamh or Aoife. I've even gotten my husband on board. When he heard that Aoife was a warrior princess he was immediately sold on the idea. Aoife Margaret and Aoife Rosalind are my stock combos.
I love Celtic names and names from mythology. So Celtic mythological names really get my neurotransmitters fired up. Add to that the lovely strong but soft sound of Aoife and I'm a gonner.
I love Celtic names and names from mythology. So Celtic mythological names really get my neurotransmitters fired up. Add to that the lovely strong but soft sound of Aoife and I'm a gonner.
This message was edited 2/4/2013, 11:58 AM
I like this name on paper, but I think it sounds strange on a person. I think it sounds like the name of a wildlife organization, or something: E.F.A. Maybe it would stand for Endangered Ferrets of America. :P
yes, you're right!
EFA: Educated Farmers of America
Eat Fresh Asparagus
Environmentally Friendly Agriculture
Ear Fetishists Anonymous
EFA: Educated Farmers of America
Eat Fresh Asparagus
Environmentally Friendly Agriculture
Ear Fetishists Anonymous
Eva is much nicer, looks exactly like how it's pronounced, and Eefa or Efa sounds like Eva with a fat lip.
It's not my favourite Irish name, I prefer Aoibhe (EE-vah) and also Caoimhe (KEE-vah), I find I am in the same prediciment. My surname begins with Mc and does sound Irish/Scottish, however I've got no connection to the culture and think that maybe it would be strange to have a Caoimhe in a sibset wih Melody and Georgina (my top two girls names)
I think Melody, Georgina, and Caoimhe sounds like a good sibset. I think each 'pair' of names (Melody & Georgina, Georgina & Caoimhe, and Melody & Caoimhe) all go together well and in about the same way. (Sibsets sound weird when one pair goes together better than the others, but I don't think that's the case with this one.)
Melody, Georgina and Aoife would be terrific together. The Mc at the beginning of the surname puts them all under the same Gaelic umbrella. And Georgina has always sounded very Irish to me for some reason. I don't mean in origin, but it seems it would be very popular there. Georgina and Caroline both. I don't know why. Irish melodies are lovely. So the three (Melody, Georgina and Aoife) absolutely blend nicely in my mind.
Then again, I'm an Aoife fanatic, so caveat emptor. :-)
Then again, I'm an Aoife fanatic, so caveat emptor. :-)
I always think georgina sounds irish too!! And I think it sounds especially nice said with an irish accent!
What about Ifa. That might be mispronounced "Eye-fa," which is AWESOME.
Oops replied wrong.
Oops replied wrong.
This message was edited 2/4/2013, 11:36 AM
I like it. It's one of my favourites. I prefer the original spelling, but I can see that it would probably cause problems (outside of Ireland).
Still, in my opinion I'd rather use the authentic Irish spelling rather than to change it for the sake of conformity. I know many people who have first names which have unintuitive pronunciations in English (such as Polish names like Dominika, Rafal, Ania, and surnames which are even more difficult than that) but other people have learned how to pronounce and spell them.
I know non-Irish people who have distinctively Irish names like Niamh and Siobhan. As long as Irish culture is respected I don't think ethnicity, or feeling Irish, matters.
Still, in my opinion I'd rather use the authentic Irish spelling rather than to change it for the sake of conformity. I know many people who have first names which have unintuitive pronunciations in English (such as Polish names like Dominika, Rafal, Ania, and surnames which are even more difficult than that) but other people have learned how to pronounce and spell them.
I know non-Irish people who have distinctively Irish names like Niamh and Siobhan. As long as Irish culture is respected I don't think ethnicity, or feeling Irish, matters.
I like it, but, yeah, probably would be mangled by the masses. I'm not sure spelling it Efa would help much; I think a lot of people would say EF-ə, and that's so much like "effing," as in effing this and effing that...not fun. To make it totally clear, you'd probably have to spell it Eefa or maybe Eafa, and poof! Just like that, all the charm is gone.
Aoife is beautiful, though.
Aoife is beautiful, though.
Yeah I really like Aoife too. The way it sounds. But it would be way too confusing for most people, they would absolutely butcher it. I myself thought it was more like "oef-ay" on first glance.
Excuse errors
Using my phone until computer is fixed.
Using my phone until computer is fixed.