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Ruairidh or Rory

84 replies

smiler389 · 04/04/2013 17:29

Pronounced the same....roar ree
hubby is a Scot, live in England.

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smiler389 · 04/04/2013 17:29

What do you think? Thoughts all appreciated :-)

OP posts:
ilovepowerhoop · 04/04/2013 17:30

prefer the second one

TravelinColour · 04/04/2013 17:30

This reply has been deleted

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harleyd · 04/04/2013 17:31

rory
like the name, but the other spelling is way too bizarre for my liking

popperdoodles · 04/04/2013 17:32

Rory will be so much easier for him. If you spell it the first way you are setting him up to either having it spelt wrong or spelling it out for the rest of his life.

Lepreporn · 04/04/2013 17:32

I know a baby ruairí. Pronounced the same as Rory. I'm Irish. I prefer the Rory spelling though .

AmandaPayneAteTooMuchChocolate · 04/04/2013 17:32

If you plan on staying in England, Rory I think.

daimbardiva · 04/04/2013 17:33

Rory. If the pronunciation is the same there's no need to give your boy a name which he'll spend his whole life spelling out to others...

Love the name though :)

YeahBuddy · 04/04/2013 17:34

I have a Ruairidh, we live in England. Prepare to have lots of people go ConfusedConfusedConfused if you plan to spell it that way. But saying that, I absolutely adore his name and wouldn't have it spelt the other way Grin

bassingtonffrench · 04/04/2013 17:38

rory is a lovely name. I couldn't cope with the other version though.

Bunbaker · 04/04/2013 17:39

As everyone else has said. It wouldn't occur to me to pronounce Ruaridh as Rory.

smiler389 · 04/04/2013 17:39

We're quote keen for him to have a sense of his Scottish heritage but we will be staying down here most likely. His middle name will be very English. Thanks for the comments! Had seen the Irish spelling too and several others!
Especially thanks Yeahbuddy. How old is your Ruairidh?

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weebarra · 04/04/2013 17:40

I love Ruairidh and know a few - couldn't use it for DC3 as DH is dyslexic and would have issues with the vowels!
People will have problems spelling it but unless your DS is going to be called Tom someone will always have difficulty with it!

Viviennemary · 04/04/2013 17:42

Not that bizarre spelling. It would be a nightmare.

BalloonSlayer · 04/04/2013 17:44

I know someone with a grown up son called Ruairidh and she told me he is so fed up with no one being able to spell his name that he has given up and just spells it Rory.

However, I have noticed that Rory seems to be being used as a girl's name in the US (like Robin) so if that bothers you, you might find the other spelling useful.

weebarra · 04/04/2013 17:44

Vivienne - not bizarre. Gaelic.

dancemom · 04/04/2013 17:47

Ruairidh isn't pronounced as Rory though

Ruairidh is pronounced Roo-are-thee or Roo-are-eee as its Gaelic

If I saw Ruairidh I wouldn't pronounce it like Rory.

dancemom · 04/04/2013 17:48

And yes I'm a Scottish Gaelic speaker!

Thewhingingdefective · 04/04/2013 17:50

I like Ruairidh best. I have already baggsied it for DS3 if we ever have one. Roo for short.

ithaka · 04/04/2013 17:51

I was going to say - I wouldn't pronounce Ruairidh and Rory the same.

We have a Ruari in our family. We are Scottish, but it is spelled Ruari - so pronounced Roo-are-ee, but easier to spell than the Gaelic.

beanandspud · 04/04/2013 17:51

I love the traditional spelling and we had it on our list (DH is Scottish but we live in England).

In the end we decided that since we were unlikely to go back to Scotland DS would have a lifetime of HmmConfusedHmm and went for something completely different.

weebarra · 04/04/2013 17:51

Yes dancemom, was going to say that there's a little bit of a difference between the two.

ChickensHaveNoEyebrows · 04/04/2013 17:54

DH is Irish, but we went with the anglicised Rory for DS2. Unfortunately, thanks to that sodding racing car, it is often spelled Roary around here. Gives me The Rage it does

BourbonsAndTea · 04/04/2013 17:58

I used to know a Ruaridh. He was very proud of his name.. maybe a little precious.. and insisted it was pronounced Rou-ree. I also remember someone joking that his parents might have sneezed while signing the birth cert. Having said that I like the more unusual Ruaridh spelling Smile

thermalsinapril · 04/04/2013 17:58

I'd go with Rory as I'd find it too annoying to have everyone spell the other version wrongly.