View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: What are some Girls V names?
Viktoriya
Vera / Vira / Vyara
Veriko (Georgian diminutive Vera)
Venka
Vaike
Volodymyra
Vasylyna
Valentina / Valentyna / Valyantsina
Vatslava
Vyacheslava
Vesna
Voski
Valeriya / Valeryja
Valeska (German diminutive Valeria)
Vjekoslava (j = y)
Vladislava
Vítězslava (vee-tyeh-slah-vah)
Vlatka
Vaivorykštė
Volha (reminds me of the word воля (volya) which means "will (as in free will)" in my language, or river Volga)
Vytautė
Vykv-yna

Replies

Thank you! I like these a lot!Viktoriya
Vera
Vira
Vyara
Vasylyna
Valentina
Valentyna
Valyantsina
Valeriya
Valeria
Vytautė
Vykvyna
Sorry I don't like dashes in names. Not my cup of tea I'm afraid! I do like the way it looks maybe Vykv'yna. I just don't like the dash. Sorry!
I mean, that's fair, it's usually the same with me. But Vykv-yna isn't like an English name where you can just choose to not have a dash or a Korean name where you can choose to not transcript it with a dash
It's a name that's (most likely) a combination of two Chukchi words, similar to the Tuvan name Dalay-kys. An apostrophe in Cyrillic transcriptions denotes to pallatisation (i. e. y sound, like la pallatised is lya) or an apostrophe in the spelling (only Ukrainian + Belarusian), like Мар'яна can be written as Mar'yana. Most of the time, English speakers choose to simply the spellings and not include those marks.