View Message

Susan
I always kind of liked Susan since watching 'Miracle on 34th Street'. Do you think of it as a classic? Or as 50s dated? Is it ready for a comeback? I actually think this could have a huge comeback in about 20 years or so with Susie becoming the new Maddie and Susannah and Suzanne catching on as well.What do you think of Sue, Suellen, Susannah, Susan, Susie and Suzanne? Which one is your favorite?
Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

Hate Susan and all the variants. It's dated, boring, and reminds me of dirty dish water. I don't know why--I don't think I've ever met a Susan I didn't like. Even Suzanne. It just conjures bad images. I very much doubt it's ever going to be the new Maddie. Susannah is the only one I can see getting semi-popular again. I know 3 in my age group. I much prefer Shoshana.
vote up1
I like Susan a lot too. I wouldn't call it a classic, but it's a solidly historical name. It had five decades of intense use here though, so I don't see it coming back for a long while yet.Sue: my sister has always hated it so much that it's rubbed off on me a bit
Suellen: looks lumpy, & like it ought to be pronounced Swellen
Susannah: my sister's name (sans h)- it's all right, bit frilly for me
Susan: my favourite
Susie: not a fan
Suzanne: second favourite. I have lots of medieval ancestors called this & its use seems to have been more consistent than Susan - it's definitely more classic. I also like its archaic diminutives Suzon & Suzette
vote up1
Susan is classic AND dated, imo. I could picture a resurgence in 20-25 years though something tells me Susanna / Susannah and Susanne / Suzanne might place higher on the charts.Sue -- one of my sister's mns; can't say I love it because it makes me think of litigationSuellen -- "Dallas" and someone who is rather down home and not too brightSusannah -- love it but prefer it sans the hSusan -- dated and not excitingSusie -- really cute though I'm not sure it's ready for a comeback at this pointSuzanne -- like it but not as well as Susanna or even Susanne (not wild about the letter z)Overall fave: Susanna followed by Susannah then Susanne
vote up1
I’m not a fan of Susan, but really like Susannah (and Shoshannah). Suzana is also quite common here and not that bad.
vote up1
I think of it as retro, and on the upswing. Like you said, I think in a decade or two it'll become more popular. I like that it's plain and gives me this wholesome, spring-like vibe. I picture daisies and bows and Mary Janes and the color yellow.Sue- I dislike it. It's just a sound, not really a name to me.
Suellen- I don't like this one either. It's a little too "down home country" for my tastes.
Susannah- I like it. Probably my favorite, followed by Susan. I think Susannah is already making a little revival. I know a 1-year-old Susannah at the daycare I work at. We call her Susie and Susie-Q sometimes.
Susie- As a nickname, I think it's cute.
Suzanne- I dislike this. It's harsher in sound than the others and I dislike the emphasis on the second syllable.
vote up1
Susan is strong, maybe a little elegant, definitely no-nonsense. I like it a lot. You could call it a classic; it is an old name that has been used for a long time by a wide range of parents. It's definitely not in with the timeless classics, however, like James or Elizabeth. Right now, poor Susan is dated. It will make a comeback someday, along with other mid-20th century names. I'm not sure when it will happen. Maybe 20 years, maybe longer. I'm ready now. I love 'em!Sue - I've never liked Sue. Very bland.Suellen - I don't like it as a given name, but I can get behind it as a nickname. Think of Suellen O'Hara, Scarlett's sister. She was a Susan Elinor. The character was unlikable, but I always liked the name. Susannah - I used to love it (spelled Susanna). Now it seems too long, too elaborated, too much. I just don't like many girls' names that end in A anymore. I'm tired of them, I guess. If there's a sleeker, more streamlined version of the name, one that ends in a consonant sound, that's the version I'm probably going to fall for. I'd push for either Suzanne or Susan before I'd consider using Susannah. Susan - My second favorite name here.Susie - I think it's an adorable nickname, but a lot of people hate it. I don't know if it could be the "new Maddie." Maddie seems like it started off basically well liked. It gave parents an additional incentive to use Madeline or Madison. I feel like I often see the fear of Susie (and especially Sue) given as a reason parents choose not to use a Susan- name. Time will tell. Suzanne - My favorite. I love it. It has everything good about Susan with a pinch more sophistication and sass.
vote up1
I like Susannah best, with Susie as a nickname. Susan is okay but seems more dated than Susannah.
vote up1
I don't think Susan will make a comeback. Susanna/Susannah maybe, but Susan is very dated. I haven't noticed Susie becoming a popular name or nickname but it wouldn't surprise me if it became trendy again. It has that cutesy quality that many parents seem to like nowadays (Lily, Sophie, Maddie etc.).I don't really like any "Sue" names. I'd say Susie is my favourite, or even just Sue. I don't care for the others at all.
vote up1
I consider it a kind of combination of classic and 50's dated. I'm not sure if it's quite ready for a comback yet. I kind of put it in a limbo category with other "wartime sensible chic" names like Barbara, Martha, Deborah, Helen, Judith, Dorothy, Joan - stuff that is not quiiite yet in the "cool retro" category. Maybe in like ten years? Susie is iconically old fashioned enough that I think it could catch on in an ironic way. I could see a very posh, professional couple liking Susan for it's no-nonsense intelligence and Susie for its quaint simplicity. Suellen reminds me of pigs. Like, a lot. I don't know why. Maybe the "Sue-" beginning remind me of the "sooo-eeee" call for pigs? I'd have to say Susannah is my favourite that you have there, though I know it's maybe a bit overly precious. My absolute favourite, Suzette, was not listed. I just love the saucy poodle-puff of Suzette. I love that -zette part!
vote up1
I really like Susan! It's grounded and unaffectedly sophisticated. However, the most immediate Susan in my life is not someone I particularly care for, so the name is kind of tainted for me (at least for now).
vote up1
I kind of like Susan too! It's so warm and simple, it could really grow on me. It does feel pretty dated even though it should be a classic, I guess because it was SO popular for a short time. I don't think dated is necessarily a bad thing, though, and it won't last.
I love Susannah and Suzanne, Susannah's my favourite but Suzanne's close. Susannah's one of my favourite names right now and probably the one I'd be most likely to use. Susie is a little too sweet and Sue is just not appealing. Suellen is pretty bad, I just see 'sullen', and it's way too cutesy.
vote up1
I'm not seeing Susie or Suzie becoming the new Maddie at all. I don't know where that came from.
I think Susannah is catching on a little bit with BTN types, but Suzanne is definitely not.Sue is cute and friendly.
Sue Ellen is pretty hillbilly sounding, even with the rich Sue Ellen on Dallas.
Susan is very pretty.
Susannah is okay but I like the elegant Suzanne better.
Susie is babyish.

This message was edited 2/12/2013, 6:58 AM

vote up1
The Suzanne I know best is the classic Bad Girl, left school without finishing, pregnant at 14, lived with, and had 2 children with, a guy that did serious hard time for drug smuggling. I should say in her defense that all this seems to be in the past;her ex-con husband has wised up, and her older son is studying to be...a priest!This is all irrelevant, I realize!
vote up1
For me, Susan is dated and Suzanne is the classic. And I would definitely say that Suzanne is ready for a comeback. Sue - fine as a nickname
Suellen - Looks too weird to me, like it's missing something between the u and e
Susannah - I wouldn't choose those because of the song
Susan - too dated for my taste
Susie - great nickname
Suzanne - my favourite of the bunch
vote up1