DH and I are really only considering names with Gaelic history. I know that they are not everyone's thing, and it doesn't matter to me that people won't be able to pronounce them at first. That being said, which of these names do you like?
Boy:
Cillin (KILL yeen)
Coinneach (KUH-nek)
Conaire (KUH-na-ree)
Cael
Caireach Carrick or Carrig
Girl:
Caoimhe (Cay-va or Key-va)
Aine (Anya)
Ailsa
Iona
Aimiliona (Ah mi LEE na)
Caireach (Care-ick or Kee-rick)
Eile- Ayla
Like I said, I know many people will not like any of them, but what I'm really looking for is which you do like, or other similar Gaelic name suggestions.
Re: I like strange Gaelic names...
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I love Gaelic names but you better have a strong comparable LN.
I like ones that are a little more obvious for the pronunciation. or at least use similar Americanized sounds. Ex. we're used to seeing and pronouncing Sean so Seamus works.
Many of them require a pronunciation key written next to it.
For a boy I like Teague, and a girl Ciara which would be slaughter since it is Kiera.
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Agreed. And since your LO will one day have to have his/her name on a resume, I'd go with one that is pronounced like it is spelled. Having an unpronounceable name can really impact a job hunt.
Me (33). DH (37). DD (2.2012). MCs x4. After 4 years & 7 months, due 4.2018!
I don't care for any of the boy names, but I really like Cillian and Cian, which are similar to many of those you have listed.
I think Aine, Ailsa (my favourite) and Iona are great from the girl list.
I have a unique name which people find hard to pronounce etc. and as one of those people I can honestly say I love my name and find it quiet amusing seeing people trying to pronounce it
it is also a good ice-breaker and conversation starter.
I'm not sure which of your names I like the best though, maybe Cael.
But I do love Cian and Aoibheal (Ah-veel) for a girl (even though these are not on your list)
Agreed.
I don't know if I have a favourite out of your list. I do like gaelic names though, but I don't think I'd have the courage to use them with their proper spellings. As PP's have said, spell them how they are meant to be spelled rather than "westernizing" them.
The more they become used correctly, the more familiar they will become. Ex. Siobhan. Many people know that this is Sha-vonne. Same goes for Seamus, Fionn, Ciara, etc.
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Please do not dumb them down if you choose to use one. Im sure your child and the people he will come in contact with will have enough intelligence to figure out how to handle his/her different name.
I love Gaelic names and I speak a bit of Scottish Gaelic. My name is the english spelling of a Gaelic name (Sheena) in Gaelic it is spelled S?ne which is actually the name Jane and it is pronounced the same way. They went with the english spelling so it would be less confusing.
some other ideas in the Scottish Gaelic spelling:
Girls:
Seonag (Joan or Shona)
Morag (Sara) I love this one because it sounds strong, it is very common in Scotland.
Fl?raidh (Flora)
Mairead (Margaret) pronounced ma-eerat
S?leas (Julia) pronounced sheeluss
Boys:
Coinneach (Kenneth)
I?saph (Joseph)
Tormod (Norman)
Te?rlach (Charles)
Cailean (Colin)
Thank you for all of your suggestions! Many of the suggestions given are names already used in my family, or similar (SIL Ciara, BIL Conor, DH Ian, DS Kiernan, and Iona is a family name for me). I love all of those names.
We regret using the more Western spelling (Kiernan instead of Ciarnan) for our son, so I think we will definitely be true to our roots this time.
I did worry about what it would look like on a resume, but we're both military so maybe they'll follow in our footsteps and never have to worry about that :0). No seriously, we have a strong, prominent Scottish last name, one that is thankfully easy to pronounce. I have friends who put something like "C. Padraic Br____ (last name)" or "A. Iona Br___ (last name)" at the top of their resume, so interviewers are off-put by difficult pronunciation. I don't want to pick my name based on such a small part of life.
I think no matter what you name your child, there is a chance they won't like it. My name is very simple and I wish my mom were more creative. It's a chance we all take.
PS- Re-reading people's other suggestions, which I really like hearing.
My husband really wanted to have 3 boys and name them Seamus, Aonghus, and Fergus. I vetoed that. :0)
We really liked Killian or Cillian, until we thought about the fact that my DH is Ian. We couldn't get past Kill-Ian sounding like a weird subliminal message. It's often got a slash above the second i in Gaelic, which makes it Kill-YEEN, but there's really no way to annotate that in the US.
I love Aoife, DH doesn't.
Is Cian too similar to Kiernan? Sound too gimicky for sibs?
Ditto these ladies. We picked an unusual Irish middle name, because it has meaning to us, and we're spelling it the correct way. It's a little easier w/ a middle name - just because it won't be used daily or have to appear on things like resumes or rosters - but still. The names you have are lovely, and people can deal.
I like Cillin for a boy, and Aine or Ailsa for a girl.
Agreed