Contessa?
So the name Contessa was in a book I've been reading. I rather like it. WDYT? In the book it was being used as a Spanish name but I think it could work in English as well.
Replies
It's like calling a child Countess for me. It's only marginally better than the likes of Princess.
Sorry, but I really dislike it. Actually more by association than because it's a title (countess, in English) and thus seems tacky as a name. I immediately think of that cooking show Barefoot Contessa, which is an unappealing title, which then makes me instantly think of a winery near me called Contessa that has this really cheap looking billboard.
I like it as a word, I like the way it sounds. It could sound great on a novel/movie character. But I dislike it on a real person - it's like Princess or Queen or King etc. A title, not a name.
I've never heard the word Contessa without it being prefaced by the word "evil"... it sounds more like a character name than a real name - I think just Tessa is better.
I'm afraid I don't like it at all.
"Contessa" is the Italian word for "countess", and I'm just not a fan of using titles as first names. To me it's in the same vein as "names" like Princess, Duchess, Majesty, etc.
"Contessa" is the Italian word for "countess", and I'm just not a fan of using titles as first names. To me it's in the same vein as "names" like Princess, Duchess, Majesty, etc.
I like it too, it's different. I like that its not too common but not completely out there. I knew a Middle Eastern girl with this name who occasionally went by Tess, and it fit her really well. It's a pretty versatile name, in my opinion.
I like it. I could see it as being a bit haughty though; not in a bad way, just in a you-really-have-to-be-able-to-pull-this-name-off kind of way.