View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Opinions] Re: German feminine names
in reply to a message by Elle
I'm reading from top to bottom, so I only now got to this post. Sorry!I'm commenting on the names I like.Aleit - well, this is fresh and different! I love it.Anelie - a good one. I once knew an Anelle from South Africa. She was of Dutch descent, and I loved her name!Elli - Elli is also used in Finland. It's become really popular for babies in the past 10 years. For some reason, I don't care for it.Emilie - GREATFranziska - as said, GREATFriederike - GREATGisa Gitta - There's something about these two names that I really like. Good choices, although they tend to be on the nn side.Gretchen - Well, this surely is something very typically German! Nice.Hanne - Hanne is also very popular In Norway (Denmark, too?). Also used to some extent in Finland (and sweden?). Good one, although I prefer Hanna.Hannelore - Another distinctly Central European name. I like it.Helene - oh, a classic! GREATIlse - I've loved Ilse ever since reading the Emily of New Moon books... GREATJutta - Jutta is also used in Finland. Getting more popular now. A nice one.Katharina - obviously GREAT!Katrin - a very nice, German-sounding name. Also used in Scandinavia, though.Leni - nice; I know a Finnish Leni. It's rare over her, though.Lotte - also used in Scandinavia. Nice.MÄDCHEN - heavy associations to Mädchen Amick. Nice, though! With a meaning 'girl' in German, I think it accentuates your femininity, quite like Elle!Minna - this name was HUGELY popular among women of my age. Used all of Scandinavia, but most popular in Finland. Totally overused, too bad because it sounds nice. Rike - I like Rike! Rika/Rika/Rikka/Rikke/Riika/Riikka sound great - but nn'ish.Silke - typically German. Nice.Sommer - NICE! I don't know the exact popularity of vocabulary names over in Germany, but I don't think Sommer is that popular. In an English-speaking country, I'd definitely use it! Theresia - niceUte - another typically German name. NiceVerena Vreni - these sound more Swiss than German to me. I've always liked both of them. I also like Veronika.Wibeke - GREAT! Wibeke/Vibeke is one of my all-time favorites.
Lass
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

No replies