[Opinions] Re: Favourite girls names that don't end in A
in reply to a message by Anya Mel’nik or Mel’nyk
In my case, a lot of my favorite feminine names that don't end in -a are of French origin:
Adrienne
Alice (English & French)
Anouk (Dutch & French)
Arielle
Arlette
Claire
Elaine
Genevieve
Guinevere (French & Welsh)
Jade (English & French)
Josephine
Justine
Katharine / Katherine / Katharyn (last variant is solely English)
Margot
Marjolaine
Nadine
Nesrine (Arabic transcription used in the Maghreb, which was colonized by France)
Odette
Rochelle
Rose (English & French)
Sabine
Simone
Solenne
Sylvie
Verveine
Yvette & Yvonne
The majority of these end with an -n sound (even if the final letter is "e"). This is actually one of my favorite sounds for the end of a name, feminine or masculine. Other names that end with an -n sound:
Arden
Bronwen
Jocelyn
Maxine (looks French, but it's actually English)
Robin
Rowan
Saffron
Sheridan
Sloane
Valerian (historically masculine, but I think it can be unisex)
The long-E sound has historically not been one of my favorite endings for names, but the ones I like are often Greek in origin:
Ariadne (Ariadna in Russian)
Audrey
Beverly & Everly
Heidi
Inari
Ivy
Naomi
Penelope
Persephone
Phoebe
Ruby
Sadie
Xanthe
Zoe (Zoya in Russian & Ukrainian)
L and T sounds at the end are also popular endings, and common for French names. These are the ones that are not French:
April
Catrinel / Katrinel
Harriet
Hazel
Juliet
Kendall
Rachael & Raquel
Violet
Going through my favorites, I didn't realize how many of my favorite feminine names end with the letter R!
Blair
Eleanor
Esther & Hester
Heather
Hesper & Vesper
Skylar
Then there is the S-sound:
Frances
Iris
Mercedes
Onyx
Phoenix
Tallis
Finally, we have a hodgepodge of other sounds:
Brooke
Juno
Maeve
Maude
Miriam
Paige
Sage
Willow
One name, Deirdre... I'm not sure if it belongs here, because while it doesn't literally end in -a, it ends in a similar sound with the way I pronounce it: "DEER-druh" (similar to the Irish way: "DEHR-dreh"). I don't like the "DEER-dree" long-E pronunciation common in British English.
***
Please rate my personal name lists:
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/117507
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/109399
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/132018
Adrienne
Alice (English & French)
Anouk (Dutch & French)
Arielle
Arlette
Claire
Elaine
Genevieve
Guinevere (French & Welsh)
Jade (English & French)
Josephine
Justine
Katharine / Katherine / Katharyn (last variant is solely English)
Margot
Marjolaine
Nadine
Nesrine (Arabic transcription used in the Maghreb, which was colonized by France)
Odette
Rochelle
Rose (English & French)
Sabine
Simone
Solenne
Sylvie
Verveine
Yvette & Yvonne
The majority of these end with an -n sound (even if the final letter is "e"). This is actually one of my favorite sounds for the end of a name, feminine or masculine. Other names that end with an -n sound:
Arden
Bronwen
Jocelyn
Maxine (looks French, but it's actually English)
Robin
Rowan
Saffron
Sheridan
Sloane
Valerian (historically masculine, but I think it can be unisex)
The long-E sound has historically not been one of my favorite endings for names, but the ones I like are often Greek in origin:
Ariadne (Ariadna in Russian)
Audrey
Beverly & Everly
Heidi
Inari
Ivy
Naomi
Penelope
Persephone
Phoebe
Ruby
Sadie
Xanthe
Zoe (Zoya in Russian & Ukrainian)
L and T sounds at the end are also popular endings, and common for French names. These are the ones that are not French:
April
Catrinel / Katrinel
Harriet
Hazel
Juliet
Kendall
Rachael & Raquel
Violet
Going through my favorites, I didn't realize how many of my favorite feminine names end with the letter R!
Blair
Eleanor
Esther & Hester
Heather
Hesper & Vesper
Skylar
Then there is the S-sound:
Frances
Iris
Mercedes
Onyx
Phoenix
Tallis
Finally, we have a hodgepodge of other sounds:
Brooke
Juno
Maeve
Maude
Miriam
Paige
Sage
Willow
One name, Deirdre... I'm not sure if it belongs here, because while it doesn't literally end in -a, it ends in a similar sound with the way I pronounce it: "DEER-druh" (similar to the Irish way: "DEHR-dreh"). I don't like the "DEER-dree" long-E pronunciation common in British English.
***
Please rate my personal name lists:
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/117507
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/109399
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/132018