How do you prn. Anais?
Do you say, "ah-NEIGH-ess," or, "ah-NHY-ess?" The first one, NEIGH, rhymes with WEIGH, and the second rhymes with WHY.
TIA!
TIA!
Replies
I say "an-eye-eece"
_____________________________________________________________________
"Dream like you'll live forever. Live like you'll die today."
♥Elinor♥
_____________________________________________________________________
"Dream like you'll live forever. Live like you'll die today."
♥Elinor♥
a-na-EES, like the site says.
Miranda
"Multiple exclamation marks are a sure sign of diseased mind" -- Terry Pratchett
Proud adopter of 15 punctuation marks. Check my profile for their names.
"Multiple exclamation marks are a sure sign of diseased mind" -- Terry Pratchett
Proud adopter of 15 punctuation marks. Check my profile for their names.
I pronounce it a-na-EES. It's cute, but nrms.
"If you can't laugh at yourself, life is going to seem a whole lot long than you'd like." - Garden State
Hannah
"If you can't laugh at yourself, life is going to seem a whole lot long than you'd like." - Garden State
Hannah
With Catalan pronunciation is more like uh-nuh-EES, but yeah, it's that.
It's one of my favourite names, I adore it!
Eva
It's one of my favourite names, I adore it!
Eva
Ditto that. And I love that name btw. :-)
"I'm Not Lazy, I'm Just A Very Calm Person!"
Charlie Blue
~My 14 Darling !'s ~ !!!!!!!!!!!!!! (Name's in the profile)
"I'm Not Lazy, I'm Just A Very Calm Person!"
Charlie Blue
~My 14 Darling !'s ~ !!!!!!!!!!!!!! (Name's in the profile)
I lurch back and forth between two pronunciations.
The first being the correct, French one, "ah-nah-EECE." Think of the perfume commercials lulling, "ah-nah-EECE, ah-nah-EECE."
The second one I use is the lazy one, "a-NAY-iss," or "ah-NEIGH-iss." The author Anais Nin is usually stated in this way (in the U.S.) and I tend to follow suit.
The first being the correct, French one, "ah-nah-EECE." Think of the perfume commercials lulling, "ah-nah-EECE, ah-nah-EECE."
The second one I use is the lazy one, "a-NAY-iss," or "ah-NEIGH-iss." The author Anais Nin is usually stated in this way (in the U.S.) and I tend to follow suit.
Ann-eese