Depends on how Polish they're supposed to be, I guess. I like this set, I think these names go well together.
I think if you have
Mira, then go with
Lev, because these parents likely took English speakers into consideration when naming their kids. Let's look at some numbers:
Mira was given to 6 baby girls in Poland in 2000, then nothing until 9 in 2004 and finally climbed to 25 in 2010, then it kept climbing and reached 82 last year. So not exactly one of the top choices for Polish parents in the 2000s. But it works as a more modern way of honouring a
Mirosława for example.
And
Lew is even less popular. There are only 450 alive in all of Poland. There were no Lews born in Poland between 2000-2009 (for contrast there were 142
Leos born during the same period). It also climbed slowly to reach 56 last year (contrasted with
Lev - 107, and
Leo - 545).
So I guess either way these parents are ahead of the curve. But I think if you're going for the more international
Mira then I'd also go with
Lev, probably. If I met
Lew and
Mira in Poland I'd think their parents were insufferable hipsters,
Lew is so weirdly and in-your-face Polish and rare and
Mira brings to mind the very dated
Mirosława but it's like its cooler, westernised cousin, which is to an extent cohesive. But I think it looses that cohesiveness if they're supposed to be born in the US. Why do the simple, international
Mira but saddle
Lew with the weird spelling? Seems unfair.
https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/109883This message was edited 5/17/2023, 1:55 PM