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Irish ladies pls how do you pronouce this girl's name?

37 replies

choolie · 24/01/2008 20:17

My cousin has just named her baby girl Labhaolse. Can anybody re-write this as you would say it, so I know how to pronounce this?

I apologise on behalf of my mum who does not like it just because she can't say it - I did swiftly tell her it's probably a very pretty name if only we could pronounce it and would love to ring her back and tell her how it sounds.

TIA!

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Klaw · 24/01/2008 20:37

You can check pronounciation here as Frank McCourt says the names.

Mind you, it doesn't seem to have Labhaoise...

Used the site to check how to say dd's lovely name

ChasingSquirrels · 24/01/2008 20:39

weeonion just had a double take at that as my friend has an 8mo called Caoimhe! Pretty sure she isn't you though as it is her 4th.

skidoodle · 24/01/2008 20:42

Pelvicfloor - they are pronounced that way because they're in Irish.

Beauregard · 24/01/2008 20:43

Yes skidoodle forgive my ignorance.

skidoodle · 24/01/2008 20:47

ha ha, Jaysus there's some weird pronunciations on that Frank McCourt site.

I love the idea of all these English kids going around with names pronounced in a Limerick accent

LOL @ weeonion's doctor, I guess it makes sense in some ways.

my DH is English so if we want to choose Irish names I have to try to stick to ones his family will be at least able to pronounce, even if they will find the spelling weird.

skidoodle · 24/01/2008 20:55

@Pelvicfloor sorry, didn't mean to be brusque. Some people don't realise that Irish has entirely different spelling than English. In fact some (even in England ) don't realise it's a separate language.

But Irish pronunciation is more uniform than that of English (where spelling and pronunciation really do part ways quite often).

So the combination AOI is pronounced EE
BH or MH are pronounced either V or W in the middle of a word, although at the end of a word in some accents this could change to A or U

Imagine my delight when I saw in a book of Irish names:

AOIBHEAL

sound it out using my guide above...

You get the weirdest suggestions in name books sometimes. I've no idea whether this is a real name or not, I've certainly never heard of anyone called that.

Beauregard · 24/01/2008 20:56

Yes it was the different spelling confused me ,thanks

choolie · 24/01/2008 21:05

ahh, thanks all - and some lovely names in there too just rang mum back, "ah that's a lovely name" she said "why is it spelt like that though, nobody will know how to say it?" - at this stage, i should point out that we're welsh?!? - she may be my mum and I love her dearly, but does she really think non-welsh people can pronounce some of our names???

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MrsEi25 · 24/01/2008 21:05

lol skidoodle that one goes hand in hand with damien ala the omen might have been a more fitting choice come to think of it
xx ei xx

Beauregard · 24/01/2008 21:07

lol skidoodle at Evil

skidoodle · 24/01/2008 22:06

LOL @ choolie's mum

I really love Welsh names, but I'm steering well clear of them for my baby because I don't know how to pronounce them properly and would hate to one day be in Wales and have people laughing at us because we were calling our baby the equivalent of LAB-HOSE or whatever.

BTW Aoibheal is a girls' name. For the many of you thinking of using it for a lovely little daughter .

Klaw · 24/01/2008 22:54

So Skidoodle, does Frank not pronounce the names correctly?

Oh well, what's done is done! Dp and I were both born elsewhere but have lived most of our lives in Scotland and we love it so we wanted a celtic name for dd

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