Alizée
This is what my friend wants to call her baby (she's in a French-speaking area). It's pronounced AleezAY.
WDYT? I think it's pretty.
- Formerly known as Murasaki-
Some thoughts and recipes
http://italianlaowaigirl.blogspot.com/
http://lagerusalemmecucinata.blogspot.com/
WDYT? I think it's pretty.
- Formerly known as Murasaki-
Some thoughts and recipes
http://italianlaowaigirl.blogspot.com/
http://lagerusalemmecucinata.blogspot.com/
Replies
For some reason, it seems very trendy to me.
It was very trendy in France for a while, though now it seems to be getting less popular now that the singer Alizée isn't as popular as she was 10-15 years ago.
I think it's pretty.
It's really pretty, I like it! I think of the drink though (spelled Alizé).
My inclination is to say it's gorgeous and the meaning is pretty neat. If I were French-speaking I'm not sure I would like it as much.
When I was going to a parenting group here about 8 years ago, one of the moms was a Frenchwoman with a daughter named Alizée. I like it. It's on my favorites.
Apparently there was/is a pop singer Alizée Jacotey who uses Alizée as a mononym. Maybe she's the original inspiration for most of the French usage?
And in the US anyway, there is a liqueur called Alizé that is associated with some part of hip-hop culture, I guess. Everyone cites this as a reason to feel the name is super tacky and alludes to drunkenness (that's the gist of the responses I got when I posted the name here). And it's actually a word name (for what's called trade wind in English). So I think the name has a very modern and "downmarket" vibe, at least for people in the US.
This does not make me like it any less... I'm the one that likes Brandy, Sherry, and Crystal. But it's kind of funny to me that it has that image, because of the contrast with my original impression based on the girl I met - whose parents were well-traveled, affluent professionals, who seemed rather "classier" than myself tbh. I had assumed it was an obscure French form of Alice.
I'm betting it could reach significant popularity in the US, but not for a while yet.
Apparently there was/is a pop singer Alizée Jacotey who uses Alizée as a mononym. Maybe she's the original inspiration for most of the French usage?
And in the US anyway, there is a liqueur called Alizé that is associated with some part of hip-hop culture, I guess. Everyone cites this as a reason to feel the name is super tacky and alludes to drunkenness (that's the gist of the responses I got when I posted the name here). And it's actually a word name (for what's called trade wind in English). So I think the name has a very modern and "downmarket" vibe, at least for people in the US.
This does not make me like it any less... I'm the one that likes Brandy, Sherry, and Crystal. But it's kind of funny to me that it has that image, because of the contrast with my original impression based on the girl I met - whose parents were well-traveled, affluent professionals, who seemed rather "classier" than myself tbh. I had assumed it was an obscure French form of Alice.
I'm betting it could reach significant popularity in the US, but not for a while yet.
This message was edited 3/28/2016, 9:30 AM
You're right about the singer, which is why my friend's SO isn't sold on the name.
I like it. It's cute.
It's also a brand of vodka, isn't it?