Candelaria
Today's name of the day is Candelaria. WDYT?
I'm not Hispanic and don't speak Spanish at all (other than a few words / greetings), but I grew up with a large Hispanic community and still have never encountered this name. I'm guessing it's considered old-fashioned, but I'd love to encounter this in the wild - I find it very mellifluous. And if people still use Candace / Candice / Candis (mostly for the Candy nickname, in my experience), then I see no reason why Candelaria shouldn't get some real life usage.
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I'm not Hispanic and don't speak Spanish at all (other than a few words / greetings), but I grew up with a large Hispanic community and still have never encountered this name. I'm guessing it's considered old-fashioned, but I'd love to encounter this in the wild - I find it very mellifluous. And if people still use Candace / Candice / Candis (mostly for the Candy nickname, in my experience), then I see no reason why Candelaria shouldn't get some real life usage.
***
Please rate my personal name lists:
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/109399
www.behindthename.com/pnl/69381/91835
http://greens-end.myminicity.com/
Replies
I like it as a guilty pleasure, but feel it’s too strange and too much like the word candelabra.
I'm completely unfamiliar with it. And at first glance it made me think of the sort of cactus that has tall flower spikes resembling branching candlesticks, which is nice. Then I looked it up and found it is actually a kind of yellow lichen! All plants have their dignity, but I'd rather be named after something more ... interesting? Sophisticated? Floral? Not sure; but I wouldn't choose Candelaria.
It looks like a name I would like, but I really don't. I think of the word "candelabra."
I have only seen/heard of this name on older women so I think you are right about it being old-fashioned.
I have only seen/heard of this name on older women so I think you are right about it being old-fashioned.
I would love to meet or hear of a real life Candelaria. I also like Candela as a nn or on its own. Del or Della could also be cute as a nn.
I like it and I don't like it. It begins with C, it's long, it ends in "ia" which are all pluses to me, and it has a certain elegance. But I don't like it because that word "candle" is right there.
I love it! I also like Candela and generally like holidays as names.
But I've posted about it here before; I think once a native Spanish speaker commented that it was weird, and...I'm not sure I'd actually name someone Candlemas, even if I don't think Christmas is that bad...
But I've posted about it here before; I think once a native Spanish speaker commented that it was weird, and...I'm not sure I'd actually name someone Candlemas, even if I don't think Christmas is that bad...
This message was edited 6/13/2020, 2:04 PM
I don't like it, too much
Honestly? Candelaria looks ridiculously overdone. I much prefer Candace.
I have an older cousin named Candelario (nn 'Candi') and love it. I enjoy Candelaria the same but it feels too lengthy to use these days.