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Baby names

Find baby name inspiration and advice on the Mumsnet Baby Names forum.

DH and the unpronounceable baby names

257 replies

Olinguita · 06/05/2021 19:07

DH (Indian) and I (white British) have our first baby on the way in September. I suggested that we give the baby an Indian name to reflect their culture. We don't know if we're having a boy or a girl. We have a girl's name shortlist sorted, but boy is proving tricky.

The problem is, the only names that DH has come up with are things that are tricky to say (Atharv, Satyameva), or that sound a bit odd to the British ear - stuff like Shlok, Parth, Sachet, which I worry that a kid could get teased about, or which would be constantly misunderstood/mis-spelt in adulthood. I don't want to be insensitive to his culture or narrow minded BUT I also don't want to give the child a name that is going to cause challenges in daily life as they grow up. The problem is that my normally easy-going DH is getting REALLY defensive about it and is refusing to budge (maybe late pandemic/Dad-to-be jitters, who knows....!)

He has vetoed all of my suggestions of 2-syllable Indian boys' names on the grounds that they are too common, or there are acquaintances of ours that already have those names, or he just doesn't like them.
To give you an example of where I was going, my list included:
Roshan
Pranav
Ishaan
Rohan
Ivaan
Vivek
Niren
Nayan
Varoun

I'm pretty familiar with Indian culture and speak Hindi, and from what I've observed, most of my Indian and British/Indian friends have tended to favour more contemporary, easy-to-pronounce baby names similar to those on my list. So I don't think I'm wildly off-base but I could be wrong.

My questions for you:

  1. Has anyone hit an absolute roadblock with their partner about baby names, and how did you deal?
  2. Any cool Indian boy name suggestions? (If you hadn't clocked from the names suggested already, DH is Hindu)

On top of all this, my very traditional British family are piling on the pressure to give the child a "proper" English name like William or George and won't drop the issue. The joys of baby-naming....

OP posts:
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Floralnomad · 06/05/2021 21:04

Live Rohan and Ishaan on your list , how about Rishabh , Inesh , viraj or Mayan .

MooseMoose · 06/05/2021 21:04

I was also going to suggest Ravi, but I see I've been beaten to it! It's the name of a friend, a really lovely person, and I've always though it was a fab name.

Pinchoftums · 06/05/2021 21:05

Krishan
Nayan
Dhillian
Kawsar
Vijay
Some friends of my DCs school. None get teased but its very multicultural (my kids thought the name Dan was hilarious when they were in infant school 😁)

Pinchoftums · 06/05/2021 21:06

What's your girl list ?(nosy!)

Biscuitsneeded · 06/05/2021 21:08

How about Sachin? It's easy to say, very close to Sachet and has cool cricketing associations!

Biscuitsneeded · 06/05/2021 21:09

I know a couple of mixed families and they have gone for Arun, Kiran and Rohan as they work in both languages.

weebarra · 06/05/2021 21:14

I know a wee Arjun?

Stopstaringatmehenry · 06/05/2021 21:18

My son has a Northern European father and both his names originate from that country, though his first name is a Hebrew variant. He’s so culturally British that I’m happy his name is a link to his paternal heritage, plus his name is very stand out. He’s gets a lot “that’s a cool name”

SimonJT · 06/05/2021 21:18

The names you posted he suggested aren’t hard to pronounce though. If someone can pronounce Christopher they can pronounce those names.

Are you looking for Indian names or Indian Hindu names?

JustanotherTuesday · 06/05/2021 21:18

Rohan is lovely, my cousin named her son this, as his Dad is Indian and he's ar eally nice little boy.

Whitewolf2 · 06/05/2021 21:19

Rupesh? It means Lord of beauty; Handsome - as my friend with that name likes to remind people!

Whynotnowbaby · 06/05/2021 21:19

I teach a lovely Sujay and an equally lovely Ayush, I love both names by association!

Fifilafrog · 06/05/2021 21:19

My friend has two boys Romir and Rivaan I think they're both lovely names.

Unsubscribed · 06/05/2021 21:22

Another vote for Ravi or Kiran .
I also like Niren and Nayan from your list

bellaisle · 06/05/2021 21:23

I taught in a very 'white middle class school' - little boy named Sachin, absolutely accepted with no issues.

imsorryihaventaclue · 06/05/2021 21:24

I sympathise. We agreed on names for my daughter but struggled to find names we both liked for our son . I wanted a Welsh name to reflect my heritage but my husband was concerned about pronunciation as we’re in England. He liked very traditional names I hated. We completely failed to find a name we could agree on and ended up with an 11th hour compromise as we had to register his birth at 6 weeks. This was more my choice on the basis I’d endured pregnancy and childbirth but definitely not a favourite name. It was actually quite stressful as we rarely disagree and probably caused more arguments than anything else before or since in our relationship.

Puntastic · 06/05/2021 21:25

Shelve the discussion until he's seen you give birth. Then just announce the baby's name.

Sorry to your DH, but there have got to be some perks to the whole pregnancy/childbirth shtick.

PoTheDog · 06/05/2021 21:26

Sohan?

I think it's a gorgeous name. Apparently it's quite an old fashioned Hindi name in India, but it works well in English (not harsh sounding)

Enko · 06/05/2021 21:27

Nikesh?

SingingSands · 06/05/2021 21:27

Jayan?

QueenOfPain · 06/05/2021 21:28

Bhavik.

Mollymalone123 · 06/05/2021 21:29

I know a Rohan and love the name!

NellMangled · 06/05/2021 21:32

Ishaan is lovely.

I like your name ideas!

Feather12 · 06/05/2021 21:32

Anything that can be shortened to Sunny is cute. Sunil?

jaundicedoutlook · 06/05/2021 21:32

We had to choose names from two cultures. I came up with a long list of names from mine and DH came up with the same for English names. We both went through each other’s lists and vetoed the ones we couldn’t live with. Seemed to work out fine.