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[Opinions] Sufyan
I'm totally in love with this soft, melodious male name. I know many people will associate it with Sufjan Stevens, but that doesn't irk me because he's dreamy and a gifted musician. :)Where are my fellow Sufyan admirers? And what do you think of the combos below?Sufyan Abram
Sufyan Alberic
Sufyan Alois
Sufyan Ambrose
Sufyan Amias / Amyas
Sufyan Arthur
Sufyan Augustus
Sufyan Balthazar
Sufyan Benedict
Sufyan Bede
Sufyan Casimir
Sufyan Cosimo / Cosmo
Sufyan Edgar
Sufyan Edward
Sufyan Elias
Sufyan Elijah
Sufyan Emory
Sufyan Erasmus
Sufyan Ercole
Sufyan Ezra
Sufyan Gabriel
Sufyan Horace
Sufyan Isidore
Sufyan Jacob
Sufyan Jerome
Sufyan Laurence
Sufyan Lazarus
Sufyan Leopold
Sufyan Marcel
Sufyan Marcus
Sufyan Mateo / Matteo
Sufyan Matthias
Sufyan Orfeo
Sufyan Pascal
Sufyan Rollo
Sufyan Romeo
Sufyan Romolo
Sufyan Silas
Sufyan Télesphore
Sufyan Thaddeus
Sufyan Ulrich
Sufyan Virgil

This message was edited 7/26/2020, 9:18 AM

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It's a nice name. It got a little ruined through personal associations (although that was a Soufian) for me though.The combos mostly seem a little off for me, bc my brain want to connect it to an Arabic name. Sufyan Balthazar is the best one.I'm thinking more along these lines for Sufyan:
Sufyan Faris
Sufyan Abbas
Sufyan Iskandar
Sufyan Faysal
Sufyan Ilyas
Sufyan Noureddine
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I think its a beautiful name, but would be an odd choice for someone with no connection to the Middle East or Arabic.
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Sorry don't like it
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I've never heard of this name before but I immediately love it. It's so soft. It reminds me of Sofya (two syllables).My favorites are Sufyan Ambrose, Sufyan Cosimo, Sufyan Gabriel, Sufyan Pascal, Sufyan Romolo, and Sufyan Virgil.
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One of the most popular boys in my school was Sufian, so I'm used to that spelling. He did not have a middle name (or a nickname)His brother was Hassan and his sister was Aneesa.
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I know what a sufi is, so Sufyan just looks like someone descended from a sufi. Either that or a strange kind of soufflé. SOOF-yan? SUFF-yan? Soo-fee-YAHN? I'm not seeing anything to like here.
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The most appealing part of Sufjan to me is the distinctive lowercase j, so Sufyan, which also softens it too much for my taste, is like a disappointing empty vessel where there should be a j. It’s an abandoned snail shell.
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