View Message

[Opinions] Ariarne
Was catching up on Olympics news and saw a headline mentioned Australian swimmer Ariarne Titmus winning her second gold medal. I thought it was a typo at first but the whole article spelled her name that way, and then I googled it. It's not Ariadne or Ariana, it's Ariarne. I've tried saying it out loud and it's so awkward. Maybe because of my American accent? I sound like the Swedish Chef from Sesame Street when I attempt it. What do you all think of it?
My PNLs = http://www.behindthename.com/pnl/37275Top: Henry and Clara (main) / Sirius & Guinevere (GP) / James & Charlotte (top25)
Bottom: Delsin and Brisen (main) / Dinadan & Ninniane (GP) / Corvo & Deva (top25)
last updated 07/2021

This message was edited 7/27/2021, 8:24 PM

Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

It looks like a typo of Ariadne.
vote up1
That's what I thought it was at first!
vote up1
Arianna is far better!
vote up1
I like the sound of the name but I’m not sure the spelling would work anywhere but Australia. I like the name Ariane, Arianna, and Ariadne too. Ari is a cute nickname.
vote up1
It's definitely an Australian thing. From what I gather, sticking either an R or H in that spot would draw out the preceding vowel - it's basically making sure that the name is pronounced more like the French Ariane rather than the English way (which would usually have a short-A sound for the second A).
vote up1
It’s a good example of a name variation that could basically only be Australian. We saw similar evolution in the 80s and 90s as Tiana led to Tiane and then Tiarne; Ariana has been popular in Aus for long enough now to have spawned Ariane -> Ariarne.I think it’s cute, though not something I would personally use.
vote up1
How does it sound in the Australian accent? You can hear how it sounds when I say it here: https://www.speakpipe.com/voice-recorder/msg/qv4mskl7331csmvoI couldn't help but go Swedish Chef at the end lol
vote up1
It's a bit hard to describe, and no use recording myself because my accent no longer knows where it belongs lol.If you listen to how the Australian says "darn" on Forvo (https://forvo.com/word/darn/#en) and then imagine taking the 'd' off and putting 'Ari' in front, that's pretty much it.
vote up1
Ok, so it's not like a hard r on the second r. Easier to say that way lol
vote up1
Lol, yep. The Australian accent is non-rhotic, meaning that we mostly don't voice the /r/ sound at the end of syllables. You could spell it Ariahne for exactly the same pronunciation.(Another good example of this is when smart TVs first came out: one of the TV brands advertised theirs with the slogan "we put the tuner inside" with an animation of a (tuna) fish swimming around inside a TV. Tuna and tuner sound exactly the same in my accent.)
vote up1
I like it Ari arn or Ari ahn
vote up1