View Message

[Opinions] Alyssa
What are your thoughts on Alyssa?I always saw it as a really trendy 90s name, I guess because it just sounds trendy.But it actually seems to be more of a classic, having been used for a long time.I like the meaning.Do you see it as more of a classic or super dated and 90s?Do you prefer:Alice
Alys
Alicia
Alyssa
Ailís. Ailish or Aylish
Alison
AlyssaComments on all very much appreciated.Please rate my list: https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/6232
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I really loathe it. I don’t like -issa endings. They feel frilly and prissy to me. And Alyssa is particularly whiny. I think of a spoiled child, though one from the 90s. I like Alison best of the Alice names. I find Alicia repulsive when said with an American accent. Leesh. Yuck. I think to me Alicia is even worse than Alyssa, even though it feels more “legitimate.”
vote up1
Again?Why does this boring name keep getting discussed on the boards? I'm very confused. Elissa is better, I think (because of the Dido association).
vote up1
I think it is beautiful. My SIL has this name after Alyssum flowers. I don't have a strong impression of it as a dated, because I don't know many people who bear it, but it also feels modern to me Moreno than classic. Maybe because the y in the middle reflects modern tastes even if it comes from Alys.I like Alys best. It has a crispness to it that Alice lacks. Alice is my second favorite for simplicity sake.I hate Alicia. So many bad personal associations.Alison is fine.
vote up1
I like it and Alice and Allison, not dated
vote up1
I am most partial to Alyson because of a childhood friend of mine and later a lovely coworker I had that both had this spelling. For some reason both Alysons I have known were very impactful people in my life so even though I usually hate Y's casually replacing I's this is one of my very rare exceptions to my head Canon. I don't mind Alyssa it's fine, I knew several growing up it's Definitely a product of my generation specifically here but I have no issue with it, it still has a pleasant sound. I've warmed up a lot more to Alice the last few months tbh before it was my equivalent to plain Jane but it does have it's own unique energy to it. I generally dislike Alicia as it reminds me too much of my pet peeve Felicia but I'll tell you what I do like Aleesia but with the traditional spanish pronunciation of ah-LEE-see-ah, but because everyone and their brother would call such a person Alicia instinctively I'd never use it besides maybe a middle.

This message was edited 6/26/2021, 1:53 PM

vote up1
It feels late-70s to me. Definitely not classic!I prefer Alice, and then Alison. I might be talked into Alys, but only as a mn. The others don't interest me at all.
vote up1
My first thought when I see Alyssa is the actress Alyssa Milano. I don’t mind Alyssa or Alicia when pronounced Aliceea not Aleesha but my favourite will always be Alice as it’s a classic.
vote up1
Alyssa doesn’t seem all the classic to me to be honest. I feel pretty much neutral on its meaning. I don’t care for the name either way.
vote up1
This is a name I would probably use today except our daughter's close friend is named Alyssa. It's not what I'd call a classic, though of course its roots are. But it's not exactly a flash in the pan either. It's very much in style.
I like Allison a lot too, I think it's closer to being a classic, or at least a modern classic, than Alyssa is.
I don't like Alice, it's frumpy and brassy at the same time. The other variations belong in Merry Olde England in Ye Olden Days, I think.
vote up1