hello ladies!
I hate to post this here, but I posted it originally on the nameboard and got called uneducated because of the way I chose to spell a name, More importantly it was a name I found on a NAME website... so i'll post this here with not only the names but a question as well.
My first choice for a name for my little girl is Rylee Cecelia
my second choice is Harper Charlee
I saw on nameberry.com that there are many ways to spell Rylie, and Charlie--- two of which are stated above, and also got told that i've spelled a boys name wrong, when I found the name Rylee under a unisex name list. so my questions are which name combination do you all like, and if I choose to spell the names that way... are people really not going to be able to pronounce my child's name; or do I sound in any way ignorant and uneducated because I decided to NOT go with traditional spelling?
Re: posted this on the name board... didn't get a whole lot of helpful comments.
Heck I have a simple name and always get asked how to spell it.
I think the both look cute. I can't choose
I have met a lot of Riley's since daycare and other activities but haven't met a Harper yet and my child is 5.
DD1 born 11/2014
DD2 born 6/2016
*edit can't walk and type at the same time apparently
I am naming my daughter Aubree I love the "ee" on the end of girls names. So i also love Rylee & Charlee, like someone else said it makes it more feminine to me. Pick what your heart tells you!
ETA: The names likely are correlated with younger parental age, lower parental socioeconomic status at the time of the child's birth, and less importance being placed on things such as proper grammar by the child's parents. These factors do affect how well a child does in school and therefore would affect how a child performs on specific testing. Do these studies mean that a child named Charlee, Aubree, Rilee, Honoree, or anything else is doomed to failure? Of course not.
Moving on, I also am not a fan of the "ee" spelling, as I associate it with lower socioeconomic status and/or being juvenile or childish. Obviously, you should do whatever you see fit for your own child, but IMHO and as PPs have suggested, the "unique" spelling will not make the name more unique--it will just make spelling it for others more of a nightmare.
Edit: whoops, had to correct an abbreviation
ETA - I will never understand why you would take a common name and spell it differently.. If you want an unusual name, pick an unusual name; if you want a common name, pick a common name, and spell it so that people will know how to pronounce and spell it. Just my two cents.
Also, how often does it have to be said - DON'T ASK FOR OPINIONS IF YOU DON'T WANT THEM!! FOR THE LOVE OF GOD!!!
Married 9/28/13
DS born 11/12/15
EDD 8/13/18
Genuine question, why can names not just be spelled correctly, why is changing the spelling trendy these days? I don't get it.
Human sons: 11/2015 & 05/2017
*formerly kayemjay*
I already have to over come so many hurdles and for me this is just one more on my list! But this is my own experience and I'm aware that not everyone struggles with this, in the end it's the OP decision on how to spell it
I don't like Rylee nor Charlee for many reasons so I guess the polite thing for me to say is NMS.
If you're going to play around with spellings, I think it's a bit better for middle names. My only opinion is that I like to know name meanings. I've picked my children's names knowing what they mean and that's important to me. Variations to spellings can affect that.
Anyway, I'm in the UK and name popularity is pretty different here. I only know 2 Riley's and they're both boys. I've never met a harper, but I think it's a nice name!
Also, just because a name appears on a website, does not mean it is a traditional name. Chances are, Rylee is listed as an alternate spelling, because it's just that, an alternate spelling to a traditional name. As someone who has an alternate spelling to a traditional name, I can tell you that it is obnoxious to have my name spelled wrong on EVERYTHING, even when people reply to an email that I have written them, with my name in the signature and my name as my email address.