View Message

Valentin
WDYT of the name "Valentin" for a boy? I pronounce it VAL-ehn-tin. How do you pronounce it? Do you think that, in this day and age, it's still usable?WDYT of Fletcher Valentin or Valentin Fletcher? Which one do you prefer?Thanks. :-)
- Maria
Pro-Sissy-Names.

This message was edited 5/19/2006, 10:57 AM

Archived Thread - replies disabled
vote up1

Replies

WDYT of the name "Valentin" for a boy? How do you pronounce it? Do you think that, in this day and age, it's still usable?I like Valentín in Spanish prounounced vah-len-TEEN (more with a soft B than a V). I don't really like the name as pronounced in English. I think it is still usable today. WDYT of Fletcher Valentin or Valentin Fletcher? Which one do you prefer?
I don't really care for Fletcher, so I would prefer Valentin Flecher.*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
Counting down the days until I go to Spain
vote up1
I love Valentin and in Sweden it would be ok (there are 388 men/boys named Valentin) in Sweden. But then St Valentine's Day is called "All Hearts' Day" here.The nn we use for Valentin are Valle (Vahl-eh) and Tin-Tin.I would prefer Valentin Fletcher, b/c I don't like ln-as-fn (ln-as-mn are ok). But if you think a Valentin would be teased, then Fletcher Valentin would be safer.Another similar name in Sweden is Valdemar (Scandinavian form of Vladimar) but this would probably sound weird in England. WDYF of Valerius and Valerian?"But it’s all right now.
I learned my lesson well.
You see you can’t please everyone
So you got to please yourself."
Rick Nelson, GardenParty"It does not become me to make myself smaller than I am." (Edith Södergran 1891-1923)

This message was edited 5/19/2006, 9:02 AM

vote up1
Valerius and Valerian are both very handsome names, a little less so than Valentin, but great all the same. I have a real thing for V names, especially the more Scandanavian sounding ones.Ooh, and I'm not too keen on Tin-Tin, but I like Tin. :D
- Maria
Pro-Sissy-Names.
vote up1
I like Valentin, I'd think it's pron VAL-ehn-teen, but VAL-ehn-tin would be my second guess. I think kids might tease because of it, but they'll find something else if not his name if they want to anyway. I don't like either Valentin Fletcher or the other way around. I'd use Valentin with a different mn.
Image hosting by Photobucket

vote up1
"I think kids might tease because of it, but they'll find something else if not his name if they want to anyway."I agree, children can be really cruel. I'm just not too keen to hand it to them on a plate. ;-)
- Maria
Pro-Sissy-Names.
vote up1
I say VAL-en-teen on first glance, but I could get used to VAL-en-tin. Reminds me a bit of Quentin, and so it does sound masculine to my ears. I think that it could work--better than fully Valentine, if nothing else. A kid called Valentin might have some trouble when he's young, but he'd be pretty much fine as an adult, I think; it sounds like one of those names a person grows to appreciate. And the nn Val is hot. ;)I like Fletcher Valentin's rhythm better. It sounds jazzy to me, but that's because I hear Fletcher Henderson (a big band leader of the 40s) when I say it. Array (favourite combo would be Michael Valentine, as in Michael Valentine Smith of Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein--classic 60s sci-fi :)

She had fallen against the windows, which were pressed against the windows, which were pressed against the old oak near across the age of the old Aunt Sophronia--was almost dreadful enough to walk on. A revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having.
vote up1
Actually, I prefer the nickname Tin. But that's just because it sounds more cockney-gangster-y to me. ;-)
- Maria
Pro-Sissy-Names.
vote up1