View Message

[Opinions] Names you have mispronounced or misunderstood
Have you ever fallen in love with a name and then found out that it wasn't pronounced like you thought, that it has bad associations, that it's a boys' name, not a girls' name (or vice versa) or something like this?
Here are mine:I thought that Sorcha was pronounced SORE-chuh and loved this. Then I learned that it's really SOR-uh-kuh, which sounds like the old Gutnish (the old dialect of the island of Gotland) word for boys. Not attractive to my ears.I thought that Saoirse was pronounced SHORE-suh, which I liked. Then I learned that it's SEER-shuh, which I think sounds shrieking. BTW, I also thought it was Irish for Georgia.I thought Remedios was pronounced re-me-DEE-ohs, but it's really re-ME-di-ohs, which reminds me of "mass media".I still like Nayeli, but I thought it was pronounced na-YE-lee. It's apparently more like na-SCHE-li, which I don't really like.I have always thought of Gemini as a girls' name pronounced JEM-mi-nee, so I don't like the idea of a boys' name pronounced GHEM-mi-nye.I think Troy is horrible on a boy, but I can't help thinking it's rather cool for a girl.
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Not anything I've fallen in love with, but names can confuse me sometimes. A lady in my due date group has a daughter named Eilidh and I've seen it around here, she told me the correct way to pronounce it but I can't for the life of me stop seeing it as eyelid!!!!
vote up1
I also pronounced:
Siobhan "SOW-un"
Sinead "SIN-ned"
Gillespie "JIL-les-pye"
Jonas "JOW-nus" (I just recently learned that it's JOHN-us in English. In Swedish we pronounce it YOU-nus.)
vote up1
I used to think Lilias was lil EYE us, not lily-us, and Lalage was la LAZH. They were much nicer my way. Drat.
Have actually met a female Gemini who was JEM in ee, so maybe it varies by region?
vote up1
I love Rowena pronounced Ro-WEH-na, not so much Ro-WEE-na.I like Chloe and Genevieve pronounced the French way, not so much the English one.
vote up1
Totally agree on Rowena!
vote up1
Rowena with your pronounciation is gorgeous. Rowenna perhaps? Hmm...Genevieve the French way is so beautiful but it would never pass in America. :(
vote up1
I say Gemini as JEM-in-eye. Never heard GHE-.
I thought Remedios is reh-MEH-dee-ohs.Evelyn pronounced EEV-el-in or EEV-lin bugs me. It's EV-el-in to me.
Aaliyah looks like ALL-ee-a to me, not a-LEE-a.
I prefer the English prn of Genevieve.
Can't stand Phaedra pron. FAY- or FEE-. Should be FED-ra.
Sarai looks like SAY-rye to me. not sair-EYE
I wasn't aware until fairly recently that Maurice could be prn like Morris.
How the hell do you say Elias. That name is annoying. It's worse than Isaiah. wtf. Eye zye uh? Is eye uh? Eye zay uh? Ee sigh Ee uh?

This message was edited 6/25/2013, 1:04 AM

vote up1
Elias and IsaiahThe way I've always pronounced them is
El-EYE-us and EYE-zay-uhAlthough I have heard them prn various different ways
vote up1
Gemini IS JEM-in-eye. I've never heard this "Geh" pronunciation before. Elias is EE-lye-us. Isaiah is EYE-zay-uh.
vote up1
Yeah. I've only ever heard JEM-in-eye for Gemini.
I've ever heard EEV-el-in for Evelyn, but if I did it would probably bug me!
I also pronounce Aaliyah (and Alia, etc) as AH-lee-uh. Although, if it has a "y" in it (Aaliyah, Aaliya, Aliya) then I'm okay with the a-LEE-a pronunciation. Alia is totally ALL-ee-a though. :P
Haha, I've only ever heard eye-ZAY-uh for Isaiah.
vote up1
Maurice is always said like Morris here, afaik.
Totally with you on Evelyn. EEV lin makes me wince.
vote up1
I have always understood Elias to be pronounced "uh-LYE-is". I have known a couple of people with Elias as a surname who pronounced it this way, and I went to the same high school as an Elias who I'm pretty sure pronounced it that way as well (I didn't know him personally, however, so I may be wrong about that). I'm not sure if this pronunciation is actually the most common/ the most accepted, or it's just a coincidence that it's the only one I have encountered.As for Isaiah, I have a cousin with the name who pronounces it eye-ZAY-uh. I also grew up in a Catholic household as a child, and always heard it pronounced that way in my religious education classes and at church. Again, I'm not sure how common that pronunciation is overall- there's always the possibility that this is a just a regional pronunciation or something.I hope this helps you to some extent!
vote up1
I know an Aaliyah (parents are from Pakistan) who pronounces it ALL-ee-a. I think that is the correct Arabic / Urdu pronunciation.
vote up1
In Britain the name Isaiah is always Eye-zye-uh but I recently heard an American say Is-ay-uh I think or maybe it was Is-eye-uh. Either way I thought it was odd so now if I met an American Isaiah I wouldn't have a clue how to say their name!I feel the same about the name Aaliyah too. I think it's having two As at the start makes you want to stress that syllable. Also Evelyn. I grew up saying Ev-lin or hearing Ev-el-in but my friends call their daughter EEV-lin so I have to always remind myself to say it that way.
vote up1
I remembered one more:Araceli. I thought it was air-uh-SELL-ee before I looked up here to see it's supposedly ah-rah-THE-le or ah-rah-SE-le. But then someone said it could also be ara-CHAY-lee and I thought that was kind of cute.
vote up1
The first time I read Araceli, I thought it was English and pronounced ah-RAYS-lee. I also remembered it wrongly, as Aracelin.
vote up1
Aracelin seems like it would be related to penicillin lol. I could see ah-RAYS-lee working, though. At least, I can see the logic behind it. :)
vote up1
Cassia - like it pronounced CAS-ee-uh but not said as "casha"
Corinna - disappointed to find it pronounced REEN and not RIN in the middle.
Georgia - used to think it had three syllables. Still like it, though.
Kezia - used to think it was KEH-zee-uh and don't like it pronounced to rhyme at the end with "higher"
vote up1
Agree about Cassia.I didn't know that about Kezia until just now. I thought it was KEH-zee-uh too...
vote up1
The only Kezia I know pronounces it KEE-zee-uh. I was surprised when I found out it's usually keh-ZIE-uh.
vote up1
I was at school with a Keziah who pronounced it Keh-zee-uh so that's how I've always assumed Kezia(h) was pronounced. I've never heard anyone say it any differently. I'm wondering if one is the British and one the American pronunciation? Like I'm sure Cassia would be Cass-ee-uh here, but Americans tend to say Cash-uh.
vote up1
Ditto with Cassia. I know it's "casha" but in my head I always say CAS-ee-uh.
vote up1
I first thought Thalia was pronounce like it rhymed with Dahlia and started with a "th" noise. I still like that, but I like its actual pronunciation too. I remember when I thought Sorcha was pronounced SORE-sha (It reminded me of Sacha when I looked at it). I like of like that.I like Barclay pronounced axactly how it looks "bar-clay," but not like "Barkley."I like Sian pronounced like "Sharn" as if it almost rhymes with "yarn" or "barn" (This is how it's said on Forvo and that's how I say it). A lot of people here say that they say it differently. Still haven't decided what the truth is or if it really is a dialect thing.I once pronounce Gillespie as JIL-ess-pee. I like GIH-less-pee better.Ivaylo / Ivayla was once EYE-vay-lo/a to me.I used to pronounce Zephyr as ZEE-fer and I was sad when it was said ZEH-fer, but actually, I like that more now.

This message was edited 6/24/2013, 1:53 PM

vote up1
Yeah, I still say Thalia as THAH-lee-uh.
And I hate those "-ay" names that are pronounced "-ee". Like Lindsay? Least intuitive name ever. Just spell it with an "ey" already. Barcley looks sort of weird, but Barkley = bar-klee and Barclay = bar-clay makes a lot more sense.
vote up1
My name is Lindsey. I hate it. I don't even go by it.Thalia is, I'm told, correctly pronounced tah-LYE-ah.
vote up1
Siân is shaan in all parts of Wales - in non-rhotic accents it does pretty much rhyme with barn. Don't know where these other people are getting their pronunciation from, but they're wrong! :D
vote up1
But which pronunciation of Thalia is considered the correct one? I've always said it the way you did, but there's also TAL-ee-ah, ta-LEE-ah, tha-LYE-ah, and THAY-lee-ah.
vote up1
I'm told it's correctly said tah-LYE-ah by a family of Greek descent. *shrug*
vote up1
Elowen -- I thought it was pronounced EL-oh-wen, but apparently it's supposed to be el-OH-wen. I like my pronunciation better!
vote up1
I didn't know that one. I've been saying it incorrectly as well then and I like how we say it better too.
vote up1
Ditto:)
vote up1
Tritto
vote up1
There are a lot of names I have mispronounced! Here are a few:Matthias- I always thought it was pronounced Muh-THEE-us, but a friend had a little boy named this and she pronounces it Muh-TEE-us.Amelie- I used to pronounce this name AM-muh-lee, but then I heard someone say AHM-muh-lee.Eisley/Aisley- I never know if it's pronounced I-lee or EYES-leeImogene- ImoGIN verses ImoGENEDeclan- I've heard it pronounced Dee-Clan
vote up1
I thought Matthias was muh-THY-us or muh-TY-as...
vote up1
I've also pronounced Declan like DEE-lan.
I used to pronounce Imogen in many different ways before I learned the correct one. First EYE-mo-ghen, then like "emotion", then immo-JEEN...but it's really IM-mo-jen, right?
vote up1
Roisin - I thought it was pronounced ROY-sin, which I thought was okay, but I don't like the sh sound (I don't have that problem with Saoirse, strangely enough)
vote up1
I always thought that Blair was a girls name. I seriously didn't know that it was predominately male until I looked it up here. Same goes for Layne.
vote up1
Agree about Blair. I've met more females than males with the name.
vote up1
I was opposite. I went to school with a male Blair and that's the only Blair I've ever met, so I was a bit confused when I learned there were girls named Blair.
vote up1
Oh, and some more...I used to like the name Romaine, until I found out that it's salad! When I was a child, I saw the name Reine written on a wall and thought it was beautiful. In Swedish it's a boys' name pronounced RAY-neh. It's rather unusual, a form of Reinhold I think. Anyway, I thought it was a girls' name! A little strange, since "reine" (pr. RHEN) means "queen" in French, and I didn't know a word of French then!

This message was edited 6/24/2013, 12:30 PM

vote up1
I agree with you about Sorcha, Saoirse (also can be SAIR-sha), and Gemini.I've always pronounced Nayeli like nay-ELLE-ee. Where did you hear about the na-SCHE-li pronunciation? I thought Calista was pronounced ca-LEES-ta growing up until I heard someone say it out loud as ca-LISS-ta. I like my way so much more.There's so many more but I can't think of any right now.
vote up1
Calista is a better pronunciation :) It's nice and Spanish
vote up1
You mean the traditional pronunciation is better?
vote up1
Sorry, my computer was a bit messed up :/ I meant the one with the EE sound.
vote up1
It's cool! :)
vote up1
I don't remember where I read about the na-SCHE-li pronounciation, I thought it was here on BtN, but now I can't find that comment. I still pronounce it na-YEH-li, though.
vote up1
I think that "na-SCHE-li" may be trying to represent the original pronunciation of the name in the Zapotec language, but that is not how most modern name bearers would pronounce it. They would use a "Hispanicized" pronounciation that would end up sounding like "nah-YELL-ee", "nuh-YELL-ee" or "nye-ELL-ee" to English speakers. It's like "Xochitl". The original Nahuatl (Aztec) pronunciation of that was "show-CHEAT-ul", but in modern Mexico it usually is just said "SO-chee".
vote up1
Hm, interesting. I love its meaning; it'd be sweet to name your kid that. :)
vote up1
Joachim confuses me.
vote up1
Ganix I thought the X was pronounced KS at first, but now I reckon it's more SH. I like it less now. I also like Cebrian mispronounced (as SAY-bree-ən), but not said correctly (the-BRYAHN).I used to think Micah was MEE-kah. For me getting the pronunciation MIE-kə out of it is a little odd. (I find Michael a little odd as well. I mean you don't say NIE-ko-ləs to Nicholas, RIE-kard to Richard, IE-ka-bod to Ichabod, or JER-rie-ko to Jericho either, don't you...)
Those are the only ones that I can think of now. But I KNOW there are more.
vote up1
Whoa. Whoa. Wait. How do you say Ganix?
That looks awesome!
vote up1
GAH-neeshI think it looks awesome indeed :DHere's a link to the pronunciation:
http://www.forvo.com/word/ganix/#eu
vote up1