Russian Hockey Team
What do you think of...?
Aleksander Yevseyenkov
Dmitrij Altarev
Aleksej Badyukov
Sergej Barbashev
Maksim Belyayev
Aleksander Berkutov
Jevgenij Korotkov
Andrej Grankin
Nikita Kucherov
Vjacheslav Kulemin
Aleksej Marchenko
Jegor Mikhailov
Vladislav Namestnikov
Konstantin Pushkarev
Vadim Berdnikov
Viktor Bobrov
Pavel Boychenko
Kirill Nikonorov
Igor Varitsky
Stanislav Zhmakin
Vladimir Myshkin
Oleg Shevtsov
Mikhail Shtalenkov
Vasilij Koshechkin
Ilja Proskuryakov
Nikolaj Khabibulin
Danila Alistratov
Jurij Kuznetsov
Fjodor Fjodorov
Vladislav Evseev
Ruslan Bernikov
Roman Oksiuta
Aleksander Yevseyenkov
Dmitrij Altarev
Aleksej Badyukov
Sergej Barbashev
Maksim Belyayev
Aleksander Berkutov
Jevgenij Korotkov
Andrej Grankin
Nikita Kucherov
Vjacheslav Kulemin
Aleksej Marchenko
Jegor Mikhailov
Vladislav Namestnikov
Konstantin Pushkarev
Vadim Berdnikov
Viktor Bobrov
Pavel Boychenko
Kirill Nikonorov
Igor Varitsky
Stanislav Zhmakin
Vladimir Myshkin
Oleg Shevtsov
Mikhail Shtalenkov
Vasilij Koshechkin
Ilja Proskuryakov
Nikolaj Khabibulin
Danila Alistratov
Jurij Kuznetsov
Fjodor Fjodorov
Vladislav Evseev
Ruslan Bernikov
Roman Oksiuta
Replies
I spend a lot of time in Russia, and none of these names is particularly new or interesting - they're all pretty typical Russian names, and with the exception of Vjacheslav, Jegor, Nikita and Ruslan I've encountered these names countless times. Because Russians know what names they like and what they don't, it seems, haha.
I love Russian names, but seeing them on actual people takes so much of the romance away from them. I used to adore Konstantin as a name, and now I'm completely put off it by the Kostya's I've met.
I like:
Aleksander - there are so many diminutives of this name. I've met the ever loved Sasha, but also people who prefer to be called Sanya, Shura, Shurik, etc.
Aleksej - I love every incarnation of Aleksei.
Vadim
Kirill
Mikhail - another favourite.
Jurij - but romanised Yuriy
Roman
Jegor - (Yegor)
I have to wonder where/why you saw a romanisation with 'j' such a strong preference over 'i'/'y' for romanising names like Yegor and Yuriy? I can't say I see that that often even over here.
I love Russian names, but seeing them on actual people takes so much of the romance away from them. I used to adore Konstantin as a name, and now I'm completely put off it by the Kostya's I've met.
I like:
Aleksander - there are so many diminutives of this name. I've met the ever loved Sasha, but also people who prefer to be called Sanya, Shura, Shurik, etc.
Aleksej - I love every incarnation of Aleksei.
Vadim
Kirill
Mikhail - another favourite.
Jurij - but romanised Yuriy
Roman
Jegor - (Yegor)
I have to wonder where/why you saw a romanisation with 'j' such a strong preference over 'i'/'y' for romanising names like Yegor and Yuriy? I can't say I see that that often even over here.
In South Slavic languages the J spellings are used since our alphabets don't have Y in them. Meg_Simpson is Czech I believe and it's probably the same there.
I live in a predominantly Russian/ Ukrainian neighborhood, so I am very used to these names lol.
I love:
Danila (I also love the Italian name Danilo)
Ilja (but I do prefer Ilya)
Jurij (prefer Yuri)
Aleksej (prefer Aleksei)
Andrej (prefer Andre)
Maksim (one of my friends is named Maksim! but he goes by Max)