Graham/Graeme
WDYT of Graham or Graeme as a name pronounced as Gray-am in the UK?
Husband and I are still debating middle names and Graham was my surname before marriage. Please be as brutal as you want I won’t be offended.
Hoping for
Ian Howard James William
Edward John Theodore Lionel
Carys Rhiannon Laura Rose
Caroline Felicity Annie Rebecca
Husband and I are still debating middle names and Graham was my surname before marriage. Please be as brutal as you want I won’t be offended.
Hoping for
Ian Howard James William
Edward John Theodore Lionel
Carys Rhiannon Laura Rose
Caroline Felicity Annie Rebecca
Replies
I pronounce it the same. I'm in Australia. Like the name, and it's a lovely way to use your maiden name. I'd keep with the Graham spelling
This message was edited 6/18/2020, 11:45 AM
I think as a MN, especially as it was your surname. I would spell it the same way you did when it was your name.
It is handsome, but it does seem like a middle aged man name to me which is why I'd have it in the middle.
It is handsome, but it does seem like a middle aged man name to me which is why I'd have it in the middle.
I like it a lot!
I think both names (I've also seen Grahame used) sound better with British English pronunciation. In the United States the two names are pronounced differently: GRAM (or GRA-uhm, still with a short-A) and GRAYM. In an American English accent I do not think Graeme is attractive at all (other than maybe in the South), but I still like Graham.
I like Graham; Graeme seems to be trying too hard. I know of a Graeme whose father is Graham, so he is and he isn't named after his dad. I've got a cousin Graham, and I hardly know him but the name is fine. My two closest male friends are both named Ian and both have a brother Graham. It gets strange sometimes! But I would happily use Graham, though I'd use Ian first by miles.