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Baby names

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

Lettice/Letitia/Leticia

104 replies

Wlkwith · Yesterday 13:46

Do you like Lettice (leh-teese)? DH has raised the concern that people may try to pronounce it like lettuce (which honestly doesn’t bother me much because people mispronounce a lot of simple names). Letitia and Leticia are also options for that reason.

OP posts:
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ThisOneLife · Yesterday 15:48

The pronunciation of Lettice (if that name actually exists in French) would be Leh-teece not Leh-teese. Whether it exists or not it’s awful!

WhatAMarvelousTune · Yesterday 15:51

ToKittyornottoKitty · Yesterday 13:53

Not sure why would call your child lettuce, knowing they’d be called that. How is Letitia pronounced? I presume le-tit-ia? If so, that’s worse. I don’t like leticia but it’s the best of the 3

It’s pronounced like the end of Patricia, but with “Leh” at the start. Leh-tish-a. Or I suppose maybe Leh-teesh-a

Its not got tit in the middle when it’s spoken.

OP, what do you mean it doesn’t bother you that people might mispronounce Lettice? What about your child? Of course it would bother someone to constantly have their name pronounced lettuce!

NamingNoNames · Yesterday 15:54

lilibetspet · Yesterday 15:28

I was saying letitita is nice if pronounced correctly, but indicating at school the fact the name contains the word TIT will not be missed.

Edited

My apologies. I also missed the d in pronounced.
luh-TISH-uh /lɪˈtɪʃ.i.ə/ How to pronounce Letitia in English

lilibetspet · Yesterday 15:59

NamingNoNames · Yesterday 15:54

My apologies. I also missed the d in pronounced.
luh-TISH-uh /lɪˈtɪʃ.i.ə/ How to pronounce Letitia in English

I know how to pronounce it? I’m not asking you to explain. I never was.

ohyesido · Yesterday 15:59

She would have to spend her life correcting people, probably several times a week. It’s not a nice enough name to warrant the constant pronunciation issue, in my opinion

Letitia makes me think of Sharon Mitchell

LizTruss · Yesterday 16:05

No, no, not Lettice (shudder)

SwirlingAroundSleep · Yesterday 16:05

I love Leticia, would personally prefer that spelling (having tit in the middle of your name won’t do your child any favours at school, I promise you). And whilst I like the sound of Lettice as you pronounce it, she will be nicknamed lettuce and have people pronounce it that way her who life both intentionally and unintentionally.

canklesmctacotits · Yesterday 16:55

Letizia if you don’t want a “sh” sound?

GhoulWithADragonTattoo · Yesterday 17:06

Leticia is pretty. I’d avoid anything else…

Growlybear83 · Yesterday 17:07

Calling a child Lettice is just cruel. She will be ridiculed and teased for her entire life.

LemonFlavour · Yesterday 17:26

Posters on MN are often deliberately obtuse. It only takes a quick search to know that Lettice is a very old well-established name that has absolutely nothing to do with a certain vegetable. OP hasn’t created this name.

I do prefer Leticia, though.

BertSymptom · Yesterday 17:28

I wouldn’t choose it but I am surprised at such a negative reaction to Lettice. It’s always seemed like a very posh name to me and they’re usually quite popular on here.

Fair enough I’m probably more into Tudor history than the average person but I’d have thought more people would be familiar with Lettice and how you pronounce it. It definitely doesn’t sound the same as lettuce in my accent at least. But given this response OP I’d probably go back to the drawing board.

oliviaAustin · Yesterday 17:33

No I think it’s a ridiculous name tbh

AfternoonTeaAddict · Yesterday 17:43

I was once a teacher at a school with a Letitia. No-one called her anything other than Letitia and certainly not with sniggers about 'tit'. Le-teesha as a pp said.

Lettice (Let-eece) is an old established name. DH has an aunt Lettice, known as Aunt Letty.

FWIW I find children are often more accepting of names than adults who snigger about this or that. Not always, but often. They accept names that adults find weird. DS1 (aged 16) has a Ptolemy and no-one blinks. DS2 has an Elmo and a Bear and no-one blinks.

BlackLambAndGreyFalcon · Yesterday 17:46

BertSymptom · Yesterday 17:28

I wouldn’t choose it but I am surprised at such a negative reaction to Lettice. It’s always seemed like a very posh name to me and they’re usually quite popular on here.

Fair enough I’m probably more into Tudor history than the average person but I’d have thought more people would be familiar with Lettice and how you pronounce it. It definitely doesn’t sound the same as lettuce in my accent at least. But given this response OP I’d probably go back to the drawing board.

Edited

Yep Lettice Knollys was my first thought - which isnt a bad association although perhaps one that's not terribly well known these days.

JacketPotatoFoodOfTheGods · Yesterday 17:58

🥬

NamingNoNames · Yesterday 17:58

@AfternoonTeaAddict , it rhymes with Patricia not Aleesha.

AfternoonTeaAddict · Yesterday 18:01

Not the one I had in my class. It was Le-teesha.

SpudGunToo · Yesterday 18:12

Lettuce is nice; it’s exotic, like Rothmans or Gary.

SpudGunToo · Yesterday 18:16

DappledThings · Yesterday 14:02

It's not lettuce. It's Lettice. An old name. Used in The Chronicles of Narnia for a start.

In which one? I don’t remember that at all.

Are you sure?

FancyBiscuitsLevel · Yesterday 18:29

There’s a Lettice in Agatha Christie’s “murder at the vicarage”. She got called Lettuce or Letty. In another of her books (a murder is announced), she’s got twins called Charlotta and Letisha, known as Lotty and Letty.

I do like the name Lettice. She’ll get called Lettuce, also Letty. Not sure if I’d be brave enough.

BertSymptom · Yesterday 18:43

BlackLambAndGreyFalcon · Yesterday 17:46

Yep Lettice Knollys was my first thought - which isnt a bad association although perhaps one that's not terribly well known these days.

Exactly! I probably misjudged how many people would’ve heard of Lettice Knollys. And a quick check shows it’s hardly been used at all in recent years.

But it’s still not a made up name or calling your kid after a vegetable so the reaction to OP seems quite strong.

CandCand · Yesterday 18:43

ThisOneLife · Yesterday 15:48

The pronunciation of Lettice (if that name actually exists in French) would be Leh-teece not Leh-teese. Whether it exists or not it’s awful!

Unless you’re pronouncing the S as a Z, I’m not understanding how Leh-teece and Leh-teese would be pronounced differently. I think you’re both trying to convey the same pronunciation but written in different ways. It seems like it’s just semantics.

Gowlett · Yesterday 18:46

Not Lettice.

OriginalSkang · Yesterday 18:48

I think Lettice is one name that has to stay in the past, really. It belongs to a time when lettuce probably wasn't as common. Before supermarkets!

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