View Message

Branwen?
Ive always thought this name was lovely...and not tooo weird for american tastes....what do you think about this name?i know there are spelling varients, but id stick with this one to not create confusion, i guess
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Beautiful.~*|Bethany|*~
___________________________________
"To thine own self be true; and it must follow, as the night the day, thou can'st not then be false to any man"
Hamlet, Act i, Sc.3
__________________________________
vote up1
I love it!
"Don't make someone a priority, who only makes you an option."
vote up1
LOVE it!__________________________________________________
Mommy to Cassandra Morgan (2003)
Preggie with baby #2.
Can't wait until Malachi Rune or Charlotte Niamh!
vote up1
I've always really liked it!
---Priscilla---

Samantha: I can't even be around that man. He's dangerous and toxic.
Carrie: So he's manthrax?
vote up1
It's nice but I prefer Bronwen.
vote up1
but bron is masculine
vote up1
So I have been told The Wen part of Bronwen is what tells you it is Feminine not the Bron
In welsh Wyn is Male Wen is female
ie the names
Gwyn and Gwen both mean "white, fair, blessed" in Welsh. the first is male the second is female ( Gwen is also used as a short form of longer names beginning with Gwen)A childs smile is worth more to me than Gold

This message was edited 10/21/2005, 8:22 AM

vote up1
Not as far as I know it isn't. I've heard of a few Welsh women called Bronwen.
vote up1
hmmm. are there other spellings too?
vote up1
I always thought Branwen and Bronwen were separate names.
vote up1
oh, i dont know..i guess they are
vote up1
They are
BRONWEN
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh
Pronounced: BRAHN-wen [key]
Extra Info: Related Names, Comments
Options: Contribute Information, Add to List
Derived from the Welsh elements bron "breast" and gwen "white, fair, blessed".
BRANWEN
Gender: Feminine
Usage: Welsh, Welsh Mythology
Pronounced: BRAN-wen [key]
Extra Info: Websites, Comments
Options: Contribute Information, Add to List
Means "beautiful raven" from Welsh bran "raven" and gwen "fair, white, blessed". In the Mabinogion, a collection of tales from Welsh myth, she is the sister of the British king Bran and the wife of the Irish king Matholwch.
A childs smile is worth more to me than Gold
vote up1
ah! Good to know...i dont like Bran as oposed to bron either
vote up1