View Message

[Opinions] Sara
WDYT?Please vote on my PNL! https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/174843
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

The name is classic, timeless, and feminine without being little girlish. I prefer the Sarah spelling because of its history but can understand the argument that the 'h' is superfluous.
vote up1
I like it but much prefer Sarah. I think Sara looks incomplete.
vote up1
Of the names that were super popular during the 80s-90s, Sarah's one of the few I don't dislike (I pronounce Sara and Sarah the same way).Mostly it reminds me of pioneer women because of Sarah, Plain and Tall. I slightly prefer Sara to Sarah; I'd say it looks more multicultural, although it does also make me think of strawberry shortcake (because of Sara Lee?).

This message was edited 2/11/2018, 12:48 PM

vote up1
It's fine and it's pretty, although I prefer the Sarah spelling. However, at least where I live, it was massively popular 20-30 years ago, with the result that I've known many young women named Sara or Sarah so I'm very sick of it. I'm glad that I never considered it.
vote up1
I prefer Sarah with the sair-uh pronunciation. Sara is 'sar-uh' where I live, I think Zara is nicer.
vote up1
I think it's about as dull a name as I can think of. Maybe tied with Hannah and Matthew. It was wildly overused among my generation. If it hadn't been, I think I might appreciate the sounds of Sara/Sarah (I prefer the Sarah spelling). I've always thought Sarah Margaret was a pretty combo, but the only reason I'd ever use it is to get to Sally.

This message was edited 2/10/2018, 2:39 AM

vote up1
It puzzles me. I understand that in the US people rhyme Clara with Sarah, the first syllable being 'air', but I'm used to Sarah having the 'air' sound and Sara having an 'ah'. So, how does it work - is it just a spelling variation without a change of pronunciation, like Ann and Anne, or do the two actually sound different?Also, where I live most people would pronounce Sarah with an 'ah', in Afrikaans anyway.I find both versions dusty and frumpy.
vote up1
Sarah and Sara sound exactly the same in the US. Occasionally you might meet a Sara who pronounces it "Sah ruh" but that's really rare in my experience. They're both just "Sair uh." Though in the northeast that "a" sound isn't exactly like air, more open like apple. (At least the way I say apple! I need to learn the phonetic alphabet!) And in the south, some people might say "Say ruh" instead.

This message was edited 2/10/2018, 2:30 AM

vote up1
Yes, I'm from the North and I don't say "Sair uh." The way I say it, the first vowel in Sarah is the same as in "apple".
vote up1
Thank you! I've heard the Say ruh version without having a clue where in the Lower 48 it came from: could have been Wisconsin for all I knew. It's always good to hear from an expert.
vote up1
Prefer Serah or Sarai, but prefer that spelling to Sarah. The H just looks unneccessary.
vote up1
I like it but much prefer the spelling of Sarah. Overused and unoriginal but one of my top favorites nonetheless (:
Sarah with the h at the end just looks more balanced and complete to me. Like Hannah to Hanna for example
vote up1
I go back and forth between Sara and Sarah a lot! I just can’t decide which one I like more.
vote up1
I'm the same with Caitlin / Kaitlin / Katelyn. lol I just can't decide!
vote up1