Replies
Good question! I lived in Austria, and here are the names of people I knew that I liked. There aren't a lot of names here because although I love Austria, the German language, etc, I find most of the names (especially women's names) extremely unpleasant. Think Waltraud and Almut (though the last one is kind of cool). It seemed kind of strange going to school (this was in 2001) with teenagers who were all named things like Doris, Esther and Ursula.
GIRLS
Angelika
Elisabeth nn Lilli
Leli (nn for Gerlinde, which I don't like)
Franziska
Karolina
BOYS
Michael nn Michi or Micha
Valentin
Daniel
Dragan (this is actually Yugoslavian or something but I heard it a lot and I like it)
Teodor
See, not very many! And Elisabeth, Lilli, Angelika, Karolina, Michael and Daniel are all pronounced differently than in English, I actually prefer the German pronunciations (especially Michael, which is much less common there than here) but of course wouldn't stand a chance of getting people to say them how I wanted in the US! Also, I love Aleydis (ah-LAY-dees) for a girl, it's not German and is very unusual, but thought I'd throw it in here because it kind of fits.
GIRLS
Angelika
Elisabeth nn Lilli
Leli (nn for Gerlinde, which I don't like)
Franziska
Karolina
BOYS
Michael nn Michi or Micha
Valentin
Daniel
Dragan (this is actually Yugoslavian or something but I heard it a lot and I like it)
Teodor
See, not very many! And Elisabeth, Lilli, Angelika, Karolina, Michael and Daniel are all pronounced differently than in English, I actually prefer the German pronunciations (especially Michael, which is much less common there than here) but of course wouldn't stand a chance of getting people to say them how I wanted in the US! Also, I love Aleydis (ah-LAY-dees) for a girl, it's not German and is very unusual, but thought I'd throw it in here because it kind of fits.
correction...I guess Heidi is Swiss. I like it anyway! LOL
I love Annaliese. Well I like the name Fayla, it's yiddish, and I think Yiddish is like german.
Yiddish is a bit like German, with Hebrew, Aramaic, French, Spanish, Turkish, Babylonian, Italian and so on wordes :)
But for Fayla it comes from a German name meaning Violet: http://data.jewishgen.org/wconnect/wc.dll?jg~jgsearch~model~GNDB_POLA~FAYLE~GT~!1!!2!!3!~0~USRECORD464
http://data.jewishgen.org/wconnect/wc.dll?jg~jgsearch~model~GNDB_GERM~FAYL~GT~!1!!2!!3!~0~USRECORD420
But for Fayla it comes from a German name meaning Violet: http://data.jewishgen.org/wconnect/wc.dll?jg~jgsearch~model~GNDB_POLA~FAYLE~GT~!1!!2!!3!~0~USRECORD464
http://data.jewishgen.org/wconnect/wc.dll?jg~jgsearch~model~GNDB_GERM~FAYL~GT~!1!!2!!3!~0~USRECORD420