View Message

Symphony
I came across this again recently. Before I picked it up, thought about it for a little while then put it back down. Now I'm thinking of adding it to my PNL. I'm just wondering if it's a bit pretentious? Or if that's even a bad thing? Others where my thoughts are along the same vein areSymphony
Sebastian
Natalia
Morgana
Octavia
Athena
Magdalenaand on a completely different note - Spiridonthoughts?tia x
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

I don't like Symphony at all. It does sound pretentious, but also tacky. I'd pick something like Aria over Symphony any day (and I'm not exactly sold on Aria).I do like all the other names you listed. Well, I'd prefer Natalie to Natalia, and Madeline or Madeleine to Magdalena, but they would definitely all get a nod of approval from me.
vote up1
I don't think it would make a very classy name. It reminds me of people who use names like Diamond, Mercedes, etc. Some classier, more subtle music names for you to consider:Allegra
Chantal
Harper
Lyra
Melody
Vesper
Viola
vote up1
I do find Harper tacky thoughIt's fine as a surname, but really don't like it as a given name... It just seems so rough and clunky... esp. on a girl... not at all classy. Symphony would be FAR better on a girl than Harper any day.
vote up1
Mercedes was a ligit name before the carsI believe Mercedes was a ligit name before the car company and it's actually kind of pretty.
vote up1
I think the guy who founded the company named the car for his daughter. ;) In any case, María de las Mercedes has been a popular name in Spanish-speaking countries for a long, long time.
vote up1
Yes, Edmond Dantes' betrothed in "The Count of Monte Cristo" was named Mercedes, and that book was written before cars were even invented.
vote up1
Chantal is classy???
vote up1
may depend on the culture... It's standard in Fr... was even in our textbooks at school
vote up1
ChantalPrincess Marie-Chantal of Greece...
vote up1
And how do they pronounce it in Greece? It probably is the Elizabeth of there, as they obviously don't pronounce it like us. Chantal, Chantel and all varients are horrible, modern names.Just like Nevaeh.
vote up1
Nevaeh's a strange comparisonIt's in no way like Nevaeh... The concept is completely different.
vote up1
What's your definition of "modern"? As a given name, Chantal is about 240 years old. Its use in France originally honored St. Jeanne de Chantal, and she was canonized in 1767:http://saints.sqpn.com/saintj22.htm
vote up1
Is it horrible because it's modern?
vote up1
I disagree. I have always found Chantal to be a pretty French name, and the musical meaning makes it even more appealing.
vote up1
Chantal to me will always be to do with chavvy English girls (no offence to anyone!!) I'm sorry, I just can't bring myself to like it.
vote up1
Right...Loving Symphony!! It's gorgeous!Sebastian reminds me of the crab from The Little Mermaid (Jamaica man!)so I don't really like it.Natalia is beautifulMorgana...it's too medieval sounding for me.Octavia used to be my favourite Roman name (now it's Flavia).Athena is lovely, too.Magdalena is beautiful (shortened to Magda and Lena is equally lovely)Spiridion, first I thought WHAT?? Then I laughed. Then I looked it up and thought "beautiful".
vote up1
I think it is a little pretentious, but it might sound better in the middle name spot.I don't like Spiridon.
vote up1
I love all of the names on your list, including Symphony. Pretentious names are the best ^-^ I don't think it's a bad thing.Spiridon is new to me, but I love the meaning! I'm putting it on my PNL!
vote up1
Though I don't usually think of Symphony as a name, it does kind of work nicely... Your first 3 names on this are lovely and Magdalena's ok. The others don't do it for me. Morgana just looks like you're trying to do something different w/ Morgan.
vote up1