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Favourite Irish names

60 replies

NoGoodDeed · 19/08/2018 15:33

Tell me your favourite Irish names, along with pronunciation.

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FourFriedChickensDryWhiteToast · 21/08/2018 10:48

..it even happened to a relative of mine with a less popular Irish name, from the teachers at her school. Mocking it and mispronouncing it on purpose.
Mind you now that she is a teacher herself, she finds Polish surnames hilarious.
Maybe they cover name mocking at TT college, I don't know.

soupforbrains · 21/08/2018 10:54

Fionnuala is one of my favourites (fin-oo-la) and along with Aoife , Soairse, Niamh, Caoimhe and Maeve, is common/popular in my family. I agree broadly speaking with the pronunciations given here but some of them are harder to express than the simplified way they've been written here. Like Aoife for example, there is a fraction of an a sound at the start of the ee sound, and the f in the middle should sort of start as a v and become an f... but it's harder to explain. Same goes for Saoirse.

I also love Tiarna (tear-na, [tear as in crying not a rip]) and Tiarnan (tear-nun) for a boy, again we have both in the family.

Also LOVE Fionn (fin) for a boy, also Donncha (Done-acka), Eirnan (air-nin) and Ferdia

Obviously the more obscure the irish name the more people may not know how to spell/pronounce it but I don't think that matters at all.

itssquidstella · 21/08/2018 11:02

Saoirse
Oisín (have I put the fada in the right place?)
Caoimhe

Cian
Cillian

IfIWasABirdIdFlyIn2ACeilingFan · 21/08/2018 11:05

I have to say I am loving The recent boom in Irish names threads on MN. It gives me hope that more people are just saying “fuck them” and naming their children beautiful names regardless of whether lazy people can bring themselves to pronounce them or not. It’s the 21st century. The world is small and we have names from all nations and backgrounds in the U.K. Get fucking used to it! English is not the only language, England is not the only country. If someone doesn’t know how to spell a name they get to practise their manners and ask!

Sessy19 · 21/08/2018 12:35

@ifiwasabird I wholeheartedly agree. And that goes for ALL names. MN has a weird tradition of being too conservative. A predispositionfor trying to anglecise names for the ‘greater good of protecting children from having a difficult name’, which is an archaic attitude to our multinational culture here in the UK. My step kids go to school with children from Nairobi, Ghana, the carrivean, Iran, Bangladesh, Syria, Serbia and all parts of the UK, so names that are not culturally traditional isn’t frowned upon... I don’t know why they would be picked on unless the children who name-call have parents who condone such bigoted attitudes. And that is more their problem than mine.

noonecansayit · 21/08/2018 17:18

Personally I think that if you don't live in London, Ireland or Wales, and you have no Irish heritage, giving your child a name that they have to explain every time they say it to a new person, is setting them up for a lifetime of paininthearseness.

It really isn’t though. It’s not hard or embarrassing. Quite frequently it’s a useful icebreaker. And it means you are very likely to be remembered. I posted as much on one of the other threads but I think it bears repeating Grin

PS living in London and having Irish heritage make no difference. Can’t speak for living in Wales but I’ve certainly never had a Welsh person be able to magically pronounce my name and to the untrained eye the languages look rather different.

I’m not sure about Irish names getting a worse deal than others. I wouldn’t pronounce Sergio or Francois phonetically but nor would I sound particularly Spanish or French when I said them - my version would be an approximation and I think that’s true of most people. Or if I’m speaking to someone who has a name that exists in English (say Victor, or Daniel) but they are Spanish then I will say it the English way rather than the Spanish way. Likewise they will say my name with their accent.

FourFriedChickensDryWhiteToast · 21/08/2018 17:51

" Can’t speak for living in Wales but I’ve certainly never had a Welsh person be able to magically pronounce my name and to the untrained eye the languages look rather different. "

yes. but I was talking more about attitude than pronunciation.

Shutupanddance1 · 21/08/2018 19:12

Delighted to see my DDs names and my niece names on this thread! I’m Irish, live abroad and people generally are lovely about my girls names - I’ve went all in and gave them the Irish spelling, fadas and all Grin

I love Aobh, Connor, Niamh and Aoibheann - all I didn’t get to use - maybe in the future Wink

InionEile · 21/08/2018 20:07

I actually live in the USA, FourFried and Irish names are very popular here, among all ethnicities, so your experiences might reflect reality for some people in England but is definitely not reality for kids with Irish names around the world.

I know boys in my area here called Seamus, Liam, Aidan, Connor and Logan and not all of them have Irish heritage. Girls names tend more towards Kayla, Brianna, Megan and other Americanised version of Irish girls names, so fewer Aoifes and Siobhans here but, still, Irish names are popular with a lot of people.

Teachers here don't sneer at kids' names because you don't always know the child's ethnic background and it would be a big problem teaching in a diverse area if you can't show respect for the cultures of the families in your school.

kenandbarbie · 21/08/2018 20:12

Yeah coz no one in Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham etc has any Irish relatives Wink

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