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[Facts] Re: Maygen
for me "Megan" sounds like "Meg"+"gun" so thinking of it like "May"+"gun" is... well.... not the simplest solution... It really sounded like a hybrid name... A simplification of a hybrid name...
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Vowel sounds are often very fluid between regions, and people are also more willing to alter vowel sounds to create slightly different names.Megan is pronounced MEG-ən in most English-speaking countries, but I had to learn to remember this when I moved to the UK, as in Australia it's pronounced MEE-gən. The alternative spelling Meagan makes NO sense to me when pronounced MEG-ən, but it is pronounced that way. Maegan and Maygen are just further alterations of the main vowel sound, not different names.

This message was edited 2/23/2013, 1:41 PM

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Megan is MAY-gən in the majority of the US. I did know a MEE-gən, but she was an anomaly and constantly had to correct other people's pronunciation of her name. MEG-ən is not a usual pronunciation, at least in the western US. So to me, Maygen and Maegan are nothing more than "phonetic spellings" of Megan.
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I've lived in California my whole life, and MAY-gən is the usual pronunciation here. MEG-ən is hard for me to say because I'm not used to it.
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Thanks Claudia! I'd only heard MEG-ən on US T.V. so I wasn't aware of the MAY-gən pronunciation being widespread.That pretty much confirms that Maygen is just a variant spelling of Maegan.
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MEG-en is what I'm used to.Alexander is more used to it as well. I'm from the East Coast, he's from the Midwest.
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