View Message

[Opinions] Opinions on some French Names
I was looking through my old French textbook and these are names I'd circled, WDYT? Do they age well and fit young children, too? Thanks.Adélaīde
Joséphine
Roger
Catherine
Marie-Louise
Thérèse
Thomas~Sadie

This message was edited 1/2/2006, 9:47 AM

Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Ad¨¦la¨©de (Adelaide)
Jos¨¦phine (Josephine)
Catherine
Th¨¦r¨¨se (Therese)These are beautiful! But, Ad¨¦la¨©de may not be easy to grow up with. Others are fine.My computer is cruddy w/ symbols. Sorry!
AndrewProud Adopter of 32 Punctuation Pets. See my profile for their names."To a brave man, good luck and bad luck are like his right and left arms. He uses both."
St. Catherine of Siena"It is not length of life, but depth of life."
Ralph Waldo Emerson

This message was edited 1/3/2006, 1:25 PM

vote up1
I live in a French-speaking area where most of those names are common however, Therese is a name one usually finds on an older (50-60) woman. Also Marie-Louise. Catherine is always in favour. And Roger, always a favourite.
vote up1
I love Adélaïde and ThérèseTherese and Josephine are not uncommon in Sweden but usually without the diacritics.I think Marie-Louise is a lovely name too, but it is not popular in the baby generation now.Aidelaide is beatiful too but I don't know of anyone with this name.
Thomas is a classic but there are too many dads with this name in Sweden. And Roger (or Rutger) is a granddad's name.Catherine is pretty, I especially like the French spelling and pronounciation."But it’s all right now.
I learned my lesson well.
You see you can’t please everyone
So you got to please yourself."
Rick Nelson, Garden Party"It does not become me to make myself smaller than I am." (Edith Södergran 1891-1923)
vote up1
Unless you live in France, I would ditch the accent marks.Ad¨¦la¨©de -LOVE this!
Jos¨¦phine -Love this too
Roger -Always loathed it
Catherine -Love said the English way, but don't like the French way (kat-REEN) at all.
Marie-Louise -Hate Louise, but I like Marie.
Th¨¦r¨¨se -Always hated it.
Thomas -Wonderful name!I can't picture Roger on a child, but the rest I have no age issues with at all.
vote up1
Woah...my computer doesn't like accent marks much...sorry!
vote up1
I like them all except for Roger and I think they'd fit a child as well as an adult. I especially like Marie-Louise on a little girly and Thomas would be so handsome on a wee boy. :)_____
Image hosted by Photobucket.com
vote up1
Accents omited because when I copy/pasted the names from the original post, my post changed them to random punctuation.I like Therese, Adelaide, and Josephine, but since you're in the US (as am I), I think it would be annoying to the children. They would always be correcting people on the French prn or adding the accent marks. Overall, I think they're nice and will age well, but I think their English counterparts would work better in non-French speaking countries.

This message was edited 1/2/2006, 11:47 AM

vote up1
I love Adelaide but I don't know how it's pronounced in French, Joephine either. Roger is rather high hat, posh, I don't really like it.
Catherine is beautiful, a classic!
Marie-Louise is rather pretty.
Therese hasn't ever been a favorite with me.
Thomas is alright but rather common as a first name (with nn Tom & Tommy) I've begun to use it as a middle name though (Ian Thomas).Image hosted by Photobucket.com
vote up1
Hi there
I have always thought that Josephine is a very elegant, special name with a lot of personality.nOriginal and timeless.I wouldn´t use a nickname and to me it suits any age.Not too keen on any of your other choices to be honest.
At the moment in France I think that Lucas is number 1 for a boy and I really like Christian.Good luck choosing!
L
vote up1
Yes to all of them - any of them would fit a child born now, throughout life. Joséphine would probably be shortened when she was addressed familiarly, especially as a child, because I think it's a little bit hard for children to say those whispery consonants [seph] together, but it'd still "fit."I like all those names, myself, except I'm not very enthusiastic about Catherine. It was overused for the peers I grew up with.eta By the way, I like a lot of your name list - Edith, Frederick, Jane, Roger, Ruth, Maxine. I don't see most of those very often.- chazda

This message was edited 1/2/2006, 9:56 AM

vote up1
Thanks
~Sadie
vote up1