Twins Heidi & Liesl?
What do you think of the pair?
Replies
a little bit too much for me. ;)
just for clarification:
-Heidi is a traditional Swiss name and the title of a book by Johanna Spyri, Switzerland's most famous children's book author.
-Liesl on the other hand is a short form of Elisabeth and it is/was mostly used in Germany.
-"Lederhosen": They were worn by men of the Alpine and surrounding regions, including Austria, the highlands and mountains of Southern Germany (Bavaria) and the German-speaking part of Italy known as South Tyrol, but not in Switzerland.
Today they are a traditional form of clothing worn only to folk festivals.
just for clarification:
-Heidi is a traditional Swiss name and the title of a book by Johanna Spyri, Switzerland's most famous children's book author.
-Liesl on the other hand is a short form of Elisabeth and it is/was mostly used in Germany.
-"Lederhosen": They were worn by men of the Alpine and surrounding regions, including Austria, the highlands and mountains of Southern Germany (Bavaria) and the German-speaking part of Italy known as South Tyrol, but not in Switzerland.
Today they are a traditional form of clothing worn only to folk festivals.
Totally Agree.
Unless your last name is Von Trapp (and if it is, what an honor!), I suggest picking one or the other and finding another name to go with it. Both names are pretty on their own, and totally underused.
Unless your last name is Von Trapp (and if it is, what an honor!), I suggest picking one or the other and finding another name to go with it. Both names are pretty on their own, and totally underused.
A bit too much.
I picture two rosy-cheeked little girls with ringlets skipping arm-in-arm with baskets of flowers or something. Together they're idyllic in a cheesy sort of way. To me they're two little storybook names that are sort of a saccharine overload together.
www.qwantz.com
I picture two rosy-cheeked little girls with ringlets skipping arm-in-arm with baskets of flowers or something. Together they're idyllic in a cheesy sort of way. To me they're two little storybook names that are sort of a saccharine overload together.
www.qwantz.com
Cute! I love Liesl
Ditto
I love it, they sound great together. Very nice.
Love Heidi, dislike Liesl
ditto
Very, um, Swiss. Separately they're fine and pretty, but together it makes me think someone wanted to make a musical combining Heidi and The Sound of Music but settled for naming their twin daughters Heidi and Liesl instead :P
A bad wound may heal, but a bad name will kill.
Scottish Proverb
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Scottish Proverb
"'Scuse me, do you mind not farting while I'm saving the world?"
All three speak German . . .
. . . so there's not much difference really.
I can understand thinking German or Austrian for Liesl, but the most famous literary Heidi is Swiss.
~Chrisell~
Proudly Australian
www.archaeochrisell.blogspot.com
. . . so there's not much difference really.
I can understand thinking German or Austrian for Liesl, but the most famous literary Heidi is Swiss.
Proudly Australian
www.archaeochrisell.blogspot.com
I think it's cute but to pull it off but would require some ethnic ancestry. Are they Swedish?
Swedish? Lol, I think you mean Swiss.
~Chrisell~
Proudly Australian
www.archaeochrisell.blogspot.com
Proudly Australian
www.archaeochrisell.blogspot.com