I keep reading posts about names being "mispelled" and it got me thinking of the "mispelled" names in our generation. I went to school with a Lindsay (vs. Lindsey) and my little sister is Brittney (vs. Brittany). Can you think of other names? What is your perception of these people now as adults?
I keep hearing the term "trashy" and "low class" in reference to names not spelled a certain way and was just curious what your feelings were. I don't think of the people I referenced above in a negative way and would have never given their uniquely spelled name a second thought if it wasn't for frequenting this board.
Re: Mispellings from our generations
Baby Name Popularity by State
Isn't LindsAy considered the proper masculine spelling? I don't know about Brittney.
I wouldn't consider Lindsay a misspelling....and this has nothing to do with the fact that my name is Lindsay
Agree 100%
Stefanie vs. Stephanie
Kylee vs. Kylie (not sure what's right there though!)
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Yes, you are correct. Lindsay is the original spelling of both the surname and the masculine version; Lindsey is an Americanized/phonetic variant. I would consider both reasonable spellings, considering the pronunciation and not necessarily a "misspelling."
Likewise Brittany vs. Brittney. Brittany is the original masculine name, surname and place name, but it comes with a three-syllable pronunciation that doesn't fit well with American pronunciations. The Americanized/phonetic Brittney was the solution. Just as with Lindsay/Lindsey, neither one should really be considered a misspelling. Brittni/Britnee/Britneigh/etc. on the other hand? Atrocities.
Stephanie has often been misspelled Stefanie/Steffanie/Stefany/etc. That one drives me crazy, considering the names origins.
Not all spelling variants are wrong and not all of them are "trashy." Excessive use of phonetic spellings (think Emalee and Acelyn) is trashy. Spelling something in a historic fashion (think Stephen instead of Steven or Elinor instead of the more common Eleanor) is not trashy. Altering a spelling to indicate pronunciation, if done right (think Emmalyn vs. Emmeline) often makes sense and doesn't necessarily have to be trashy. There's a fine line, but it exists.
Camryn instead of Cameron bothers me. I also met a lady today whose daughter is Kameran. Yuck.
I went to school with a Lynzee and I teach a Lynsea.
Wasn't there an actress who spelled her name Khrystyne? Yes, Khrystyne Haje.
I consider all of these "misspellings".
Which one is right?
Tanya, Tonya, Tonia, Tawnya, Tanja
They're all the same name just spelled differently. My name is Tanya and have met people with all of these different spellings. I usually have to tell people "T.A." otherwise they'll use an "O".
My DD's name is Michela. People may think I 'misspelled' her name. Nope it's the Italian way to spell her name. If people think I'm stupid... go for it.
I agree with this.
Signed,
Aimee not Amy or Amie (none of which I consider to be 'trashy' or 'low class' spellings of this name. Dated, hello, 1978! but not trashy)
My SIL is Tawnia.
My cousin is Stacey and hates that her mother spelled it that way. My BIL was named Nicholus by accident, was meant to be Nicholas, MIL spelled it wrong
Ha, I'm an Aimee too, and have the same feelings about the spelling. Although I do wish my name was the more common spelling.