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[Opinions] Letitia
I've always quite liked this, but the English pronunciation does sound a bit like a sneeze. WDYT, and which variant do you prefer - Laetitia, Leticia, Letitia? Do you like Letty or Tish as nns. or something else? Combos?
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Deep in my family tree there was a Leticia Muriel, born before 1910 and always known as Muriel. Neither was a family name till then, though she got a niece named Muriel after her. She told me that she had a boss once who used to call her Tish.As a nn, I'd far prefer Letty, which sounds fresh and frisky and young. Tish really is sneezy! And as a spelling I'd like Laetitia myelf to keep the classical links alive.Isn't Lettice awful? I can't imagine how the Victorians could enjoy it: didn't they eat their salad?
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I've always loved Letitia. It's so classy and sophisticated. Some people are out off by the "tit" in the middle, but I don't mind. I guess if it's really a problem you could always spell it Leticia. I like Letty as a nn even though it reminds me of "lettuce". Tish is cute, too; it sounds like the kind of nn a wealthy family would give a child. Laetitia is such an elegant spelling. Too bad it would probably confuse too many people.
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I had a friend in Belgium whose name was Laetitia, she went by Titi.
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I like Laetitia best and I'd pronounce it the French way, so Tish is not a NN option for me. How about Tia or Lea?Combos:Laetitia Audrey
Laetitia Serafina
Laetitia ClaireElla Laetitia
Audrey Laetitia
Laura Laetitia

This message was edited 2/17/2010, 9:03 AM

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I actually prefer Laetitia
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Tritto
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ditto.
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I think it's ok, I prefer Letitia or Leticia, and Letty as a nn.I know someone whose father wanted to named her Letitia, and her mother liked Natasha. So they compromised with LaTasha :/
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