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“Lisa”
I have now met/come across two people who are both known by the nickname Lisa. One was Elisabeth and the other was Alicia pronounced Aliseea. WDYT of Lisa and what full name would you use to get the nickname Lisa?Don’t take criticism from someone you wouldn’t take advice from

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Lisa means "fox" in my language. So I've got mixed feelings on this name when it stands alone. As a diminutive- Larisa.
I love Lisa as a standalone name and I hope it returns in popularity.
Lisa is a name I've always enjoyed. While it started out as a nickname, I've only known one person, a former coworker, who used Lisa as a nickname--and it was for Elizabeth (and I'd known her for a couple months before learning this). Otherwise (to my knowledge), all the Lisas I've met--across age groups--has had Lisa as their legal name. In this respect, it has gone the way of Molly, Sadie, Sally, etc., as a diminutive that's now its own unique name.Lisa has become "dated" and basically a "Mom name," but I've met a couple in my generation (though one of them was the coworker who was "really" Elizabeth). Again, I've always liked Lisa. It's a warm and inviting name, pretty without being fussy. If short-and-sweet ever become the trend that surpasses "princess names" (Isabella, Olivia & Company), I'd like to see Lisa make a comeback.
I was almost named Elizabeth “Lisa”, but I am SO glad I’m not! I’ve always thought Lisa to be plain, boring and too common (popular).
I think it's plain but alright. I have never thought of Lisa as a nickname for Alicia, but it works. I'd choose Elisabeth as a full name, and being more creative, Élisabeau, Elisenda or Lisandra.
Lisa is lovely and great as a standalone name
I'm a fan of Lisa! I actually use it as my nickname when I'm ordering food/drinks.Annalisa "Lisa" is my favorite full name for it.
I know a Lisa, full name, who is now in her 50s; there was an outbreak of Lisa people in South Africa, all about the same age. If I had to, I suppose Alicia has an s sound and would therefore work better than Elisabeth, which sounds like Elizabeth.