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Wenhaston in Suffolk has the names in its graveyard up on the Internet, and while browsing through same (don't ask!) I found a 19th century named Betsy Eliza. So Ninon Annie Soline rang a bell. Is Ninon ever used as an independent name in France, or only as a nn, or both? Because Betsy and Eliza both strike me as strictly nicks - as does Annie - so it does seem odd. Maybe the girls are/were named after a Ninon and an Annie, a Betsy and an Eliza?
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Additional French names are almost always given for relatives (and sometimes saints), which is why you find such odd combinations in these lists; they're not 'middle names' in the English way, or used as such, so Annie and Soline will almost definitely be relatives of the child.
Nicknames as full names are everywhere these days. Ninon as a stand-alone name is in the French charts, and has been for around 20 years. INSEE shows some (rare) use from the 1910s onwards.
I've seen Betsy and Eliza as Victorian sisters! and also Fanny and Frances, in my own tree.
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And there's always good old ignorance, or unawareness! I know a woman whose mother-in-law was a supremely annoying Ellen, known as Nellie. She had only had one son, so never got the chance to name a girl; when her DIL was pregnant she nagged constantly about names, her own name, the baby's best possible future name ... none of which cut any ice because DIL had known from her schooldays that she was going to name her daughter after her friend Elaine, whose nn was Laine; that duly became the baby's name. "No way was I going to use that old bat's name" snorted her by now ex-DIL when telling the story, and when I pointed out that actually she had, she was gobsmacked, and also amused to think that nobody else, specifically the unfortunate Old Bat, had known either.
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Léopold Côme: This is really handsome.
Maïeul: Unusual. Anyone with ideas on pronunciation?
Soan Mathieu Michel: Soan is very interesting. I think I like it.
Mahault Maïtena Volodia: Another unusual name. Any idea on the history/pronunciations?

This message was edited 7/2/2016, 7:58 PM

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I like Maïeul very much, it was a nice surprise to see one - it's a variant of Mayeul, which is in submitted names. Not mentioned is that he was an early saint, also known as Majolus of Cluny. I can't describe French pronunciations in a sufficiently international way so here's a Forvo link: http://forvo.com/search/Mayeul/Mahault is an alternate spelling of Mahaut. Maïtena & Volodia have been submitted:
http://www.behindthename.com/name/maitena/submitted
http://www.behindthename.com/name/volodia/submitted
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So much pretty. I love the French and Finnish BAs lolI always end up adding a bunch of names to my list from these posts.
And I don't know why, because neither of these names are on my favorites but Romane Marcelle really sticks out to me. It's beautiful for reason... I think I'm going to save it for story use!
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Haha, I add some, too. I think I tend to find them beautiful and I usually find a few I have never heard of before.
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I like:Arthur Maxime
Robin
Léandro
Louis
Raphaël Samuel
Lucas Jules Vincent
Marius Nicolas Yvon
Victor Julien Léonard
Gabriel David
Auguste René Léon - don't like René but it's a good comboCélia H
Ayla Nur
Céleste Catherine Gratienne - don't like Gratienne but the others are nice
Joséphine
Manon
Alix
Isaline
Amandine
Lily - kind of
Anaïs JoëlleMy favorite by far is Arthur Maxime.
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