:)
Chloé
In
France this has been common for a long time so it bores me a little bit. The sound is nice, elegant and crisp, but I am a bit tired of it in general. It does have a nice meaning, it makes me think of spring. It is a very fresh, green name, if that makes and sense, and at the same time elegant and strong. But it is also incredibly overused and destined to sound dated in a few years. In
France this was at its most common in the year 2000, when it was at #4. It was actually placed higher in 2014, at #3, but not used as much as in 2000 which I guess is because the variety in names increased and less children were given top 20 names or maybe because many babies were born in 2000.
Chloé has been in the French top 5 since 1997 so it definitely feels tired and like it needs a break. In 1994 it made the top 20, in 1995 it was in the top 15 and in the top 10 in 1996, top 5 since 1997. It made the top 50 as early as 1988, so it has been common for quite a while.
Léa
I strongly dislike this, to be honest. The meaning is just horrible to me. I trust the Oxford Dictionary which lists this name as meaning weary/languid. Apparently this meaning comes from the Biblical
Leah who was said to have weary eyes which was supposed to mean that she wasn't beautiful (in the Bible
Rachel (or
Rachele in Italian,
Rahel in
German,
Rachel in French) is the beautiful sister and
Leah,
Lea the ugly one :( I also don't like the Bible story, because
Jacob wanted to marry
Rachel but he was tricked into spending the wedding night with
Leah, therefore marrying her. I am not even religious but I remember this story and the whole meaning/background of this name just bothers me. Plus there are tons of similar names popular in
France so the sound bores me too. For example common in
France right now are:
Lina (very common),
Lena,
Louna, Lia...they all sound so similar.
Lea feels tired too, it was most popular in 2001, and at #1 for several years, but I know many born in the 80s and 90s as well.
Inès
This is common too, but in comparison to
Chloé and
Léa it almost feels like a relief :P Because it seems fresher than those two. I like the sound, it is elegant. This is definitely m favorite from the girls list. It was most common in 2010, about ten years after Chloé/Léa so doesn't feel so tired yet.
Manon
Again this was/is very common.
Ninon was sort of common too, but not as much as
Manon. It sounds nice in its full form but the girl I grew up with who had this name got called Manni :( Not so elegant. It is more of a 90s name, at its most common in 1995. But it still doesn't feel as tired as
Léa and
Chloé. I can't really explain why as it was also at #1 (like
Léa) and common for a long time (like
Chloé) but the sound feels fresher, maybe because there aren't so many names that end in -on (
Marion,
Manon,
Ninon - can't think of any others now) but many that are similar to
Léa (
Lina,
Lana,
Lena,
Louna,
Lia) and
Chloé is just everywhere where I used to live, so maybe a regional thing. Maybe it is also because
Manon doesn't have an alternate spelling that is common whereas
Cloé was used a lot too!
Louis
A classic, but it still makes me think of
Louis, roi-soleil, the sun king. This was at its most common in the 20s, but I think it never felt really dated or anything, it really is a classic and still used a lot. I think it's fine.
Raphaël
This is okay, I much prefer
Raffaella and
Raphaëlle for girls! I knew a
Raphael (he was from Austria) growing up and he became Raphi which wasn't so attractive. This was common in recent years but it still feels classic.
Hugo
Most common in 2000. It feels stylish but a bit tired. Names ending in -o are/were super hip in
France in the last couple of years!
Théo especially and
Enzo!
Sacha
More common in recent years, feels a bit trendy. In Austria it is 70s/80s dated and spelled
Sascha. In Austria I have never heard it on girls but in
France I have. I actually like it spelled
Sasha and for girls :)
Maël
This is masculine (
Maëlle is feminine) but always felt a bit soft. I definitely prefer
Maëlle on a girl. It has become popular in recent years, feels a bit trendy and not classic.
Ok this got long :o I like writing about French names :D