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Re: Laurence
in reply to a message by Pie
I don't think Laurent's too French - we've got lots of French ancestry so I could always claim I'm tapping into that.I keep flipping between Laurence and Lawrence - sometimes I love the chunky clunkiness of Lawrence, and sometimes I prefer the sleeker more refined Laurence. I'm torn! Maybe if I came up with a combo I adored...
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Sorry to but in. But Laurent is beyond gorgeous. It's almost too good to use, know what I mean.But I do know one. A U.S. boy named Jean-Paul Laurent. How neat is that? His father is German-American and his mother is Vietnamese American. He's so good looking too. He goes by Jean-Paul or J.P. We're not in a French speaking area, but I'm surprised how often he goes by Jean-Paul. Anyway. Laurent is to die for gorgeous. And it may be easier for non-French speakers to use than you might think. :-) I'm now torn between Laurent and Lauritz for you.
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I know a Laurent in passing too, and he hangs out with mostly English people (He's french-Canadian) and nobody has trouble with his name. We say it a little flatter than we should I'm sure, but we do pretty good. I've never met anyone who calls him "Lorrent" or anything - but then I don't know him very well.I love Lauritz but I could see myself using Laurent more easily for sure. It's more "me" - more romantic rather than edgy.
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I suck at combos today, but Lawrence George is chunktastic. Laurence Arthur, Laurence Douglas or Laurence Gerald work nicely for me too - hmmm what else - maybe Laurence Jeffrey? Two honoring names for the price of one! Or go full-on French and have Laurent Étienne.
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Way back when, I went out with a Laurence Gregory who went by Gregory. It was a family tradition: Laurence in front, but use what followed.
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