Ah, okay. It makes sense now. Knowing the origin and culture of the name definitely helps. Without context, and yes, with English bias, it struck me as "stasis" (as in, frozen/stagnant) with a "unique" spelling. I'm assuming the "a" is a short sound like "apple"? Not like "say" which is what I assumed. Sta-sis (phonetic spelling) is a great name, all the more so if it's familiar in your region. I'm South African. My twins are Coetsee (koot-see-uh) for my son and Estelle Wivina (vee-vee-nah) for my daughter. I'm not doing any opinion polls here. I Googled Wivina once (imo, a simple, say-it-like-you-write-it name) and the hue and cry over the "weirdness" of it was astonishing. I can't imagine what the American response to Coetsee would be (and I don't want to be enlightened, please don't share negative comments) but my son will not be growing up in the US or even in an English community. It's a well-known surname in my culture and honours my family's legacy. It will be unusual as a first name, but not unfamiliar where he will actually grow up. Stanislav is beautiful, but knowing the true origin of Stasys, I think it's fantastic 10/10