Anastasia
Some days I like Anastasia so much I almost love it, and other days I barely like it at all. What are your thoughts on it? If you love it, can you persuade me to love it? If you hate it it, can you convince me to hate it too?
Thanks!
Jagoda
★ Top 25: https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/136993/97278 ★
Thanks!
Jagoda
★ Top 25: https://www.behindthename.com/pnl/136993/97278 ★
Replies
I love it! It's gorgeous. I can see it working on a woman of all ages and it has an ethereal type of beauty. It definitely gives me that fairytale vibe.
While pregnant with my youngest, I took my older two children to see the movie, Anastasia, which really influenced me to the point where I briefly considered the name for my youngest. Anastasia is a beautiful, ethereal, a tad larger than life, and complex name. I love it. What made me dismiss the name as a potential name for my dd is that complexity and the various pronunciations. Ultimately, I just felt that it wasn't a good fit for my family.
Its ok, just a little much. Not a fan of the last part of it...It's crazy how popular it got in the past year, maybe because of the rise of frilly princess names?
I love the name Anastasia! It's so gorgeous and elegant. I like that it is unexpected and yet familiar. It sounds a bit exotic without sounding weird. It also has so much history behind it. I happen to love that it is a saint's name and that it comes with a bunch of cool nicknames (i.e. Anya, Ana, Annie, Tasia, Nat, Stacy, and so on).
I love Anya!
Anastasia sounds like an old love song full of memory and longing. I love the meaning 'resurrection' and always picture a phoenix rising from the ashes. Some days I love it enough to use it, but at other times, the fate of Anastasia Romanov and her entire family seems too sad of an association.
Whether you love it or hate it, apparently people care about it in some way. I would rather have a name that provoked a little feeling than nothing at all as long as the reactions weren't extreme or tied to a single unpleasant person (Adolph,Osama, Delilah), but some people prefer to have a name that nobody particularly likes or dislikes.
Whether you love it or hate it, apparently people care about it in some way. I would rather have a name that provoked a little feeling than nothing at all as long as the reactions weren't extreme or tied to a single unpleasant person (Adolph,Osama, Delilah), but some people prefer to have a name that nobody particularly likes or dislikes.
Gosh, what a lovely description that is! You might have convinced me...
your first sentence is a very lovely description of a name, and it makes me like Anastasia a bit more.
I slightly dislike it. I don't want to make you hate it, though. I'd instinctively pronounce it AN-ə-STAYZ-yə.
Here's all my vague associations...
1. The "stasi" reminds me of "stasis", probably because I'm already associating it with flat characters (the animated Anastasia and Anastasia Steele).
2. It reminds me of kids being killed by terrorists.
3. The 'stayz' sound reminds me of "blaze", "craze", "Purple Haze", and Dazed and Confused.
4. The 'nast' reminds me of "nasty" (which has mixed connotations to me) and canasta (a card game that my grandparents loved).
5. The 'tasi' reminds me of "fantasy", probably because I'm already thinking of it in conjunction with "princess".
6. My overall impression of it is mixed/contradictory: on one hand, it comes across as delicate, refined, and maybe repressed; on the other, I sorta get a "kicking ass and taking names" vibe from it.
I think it has a lot of potential, regardless of pronunciation. If I met an Anastasia IRL (I haven't yet, as far as I know), she'd be my #1 association with it. Plus if someone named Anastasia decides it's too much, there's a perfectly ordinary built-in NN she could use instead (Ana), so I wouldn't say it's too "out there" or risky or anything.
Here's all my vague associations...
1. The "stasi" reminds me of "stasis", probably because I'm already associating it with flat characters (the animated Anastasia and Anastasia Steele).
2. It reminds me of kids being killed by terrorists.
3. The 'stayz' sound reminds me of "blaze", "craze", "Purple Haze", and Dazed and Confused.
4. The 'nast' reminds me of "nasty" (which has mixed connotations to me) and canasta (a card game that my grandparents loved).
5. The 'tasi' reminds me of "fantasy", probably because I'm already thinking of it in conjunction with "princess".
6. My overall impression of it is mixed/contradictory: on one hand, it comes across as delicate, refined, and maybe repressed; on the other, I sorta get a "kicking ass and taking names" vibe from it.
I think it has a lot of potential, regardless of pronunciation. If I met an Anastasia IRL (I haven't yet, as far as I know), she'd be my #1 association with it. Plus if someone named Anastasia decides it's too much, there's a perfectly ordinary built-in NN she could use instead (Ana), so I wouldn't say it's too "out there" or risky or anything.
You make some really interesting points! I love the idea of “kicking ass and taking names” vibes!
I posted a while ago about Anastasia, basically saying the same thing: some days I think it's absolutely gorgeous, while others I find it... too much.
Its okay. A bit long, but thats not that bad. And not a fan of the nicknames.
I like it, but only pronounced the Russian / Ukrainian way (ah-nah-STAH-see-ah). I realize this is pretentious in English and so really wouldn’t recommend it as a name here. The English pronunciation seems slurred and cutesy to me, so I really dislike it.
Nicknames that could work (with either pronunciation):
Ana
Stasya
Stacie
Nicknames that could work (with either pronunciation):
Ana
Stasya
Stacie
I really like the STAH-see-a pronunciation but I’m not sure it would work in the UK either!
When I was a kid I really loved the Anastasia Krupnik series by Lois Lowry. It was the first time I'd encountered the name, I think. The name isn't awful but I can't really ever warm to it for a few reasons:
1. The pronunciation. I know in Russian, etc, it's Ah-Nah-Stah-Zee-Ah, which sounds just unbearably pompous and pretentious in American English, like saying vahz for vase.
2. The usual pronunciation, Anna-STAY-Zha, isn't particularly attractive either, and reminds me of anesthesia.
3. It's kind of a mouthful, but knocking it down to Anna or Stacy just seems pointless; if you want to use Anna or Stacy that bad, just use those and leave Anastasia out of it.
1. The pronunciation. I know in Russian, etc, it's Ah-Nah-Stah-Zee-Ah, which sounds just unbearably pompous and pretentious in American English, like saying vahz for vase.
2. The usual pronunciation, Anna-STAY-Zha, isn't particularly attractive either, and reminds me of anesthesia.
3. It's kind of a mouthful, but knocking it down to Anna or Stacy just seems pointless; if you want to use Anna or Stacy that bad, just use those and leave Anastasia out of it.
One of my aunts used to say vahz, and tried to get me to say it too. But I wouldn't. Couldn't, really. This was early in my teens, and I was sure, still am, that I'm not a person who says Vahz.
She also wanted me to say "ahmond", for almond. I have looked that up, and seems either is acceptable.
She was a very nice person, not pretentious really.
Vase, at least, is not a word that comes up often, unless you are a florist.
She also wanted me to say "ahmond", for almond. I have looked that up, and seems either is acceptable.
She was a very nice person, not pretentious really.
Vase, at least, is not a word that comes up often, unless you are a florist.
I read once, I think it was Miss Manners, that you should only say vahz if you plan on putting dahzies in it.
Vahz is the British English pronunciation!
This message was edited 2/12/2018, 3:08 PM