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View Poll Results: Which Americanized spelling of Eilidh do you prefer to get the prn Eye-lee?

Voters
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  • Islie

    3 7.69%
  • Eislie

    8 20.51%
  • Isley

    7 17.95%
  • Eiley

    24 61.54%
Multiple Choice Poll.
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Results 11 to 20 of 24
  1. #11
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Posts
    880
    Eily is at the top of our list! :-) I love the name! I voted for Eiley.

  2. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Location
    Cair Paravel :)
    Posts
    12,194
    How are you saying Isley? I would say Isley as EYE-lee, but Eilidh is AY-lee... If you want EYE-lee, I think Isley would be the most natural spelling for it. If you like AY-lee, I would go with Eilidh--it looks sweetest and classiest to me.

    Good luck!
    Ashley
    twenty-something name lover dreaming of adoption.

    Isabelle | Arianne | Olivia | Violet | Rachel | Liliana | Charlotte | Eleni | Hannah | Eva | Catherine | Tess | Zara
    Caleb | Everett | Asher | Jack | Grayson | Avery | Brody | Bailey | Spencer | Samuel | Charles | Boaz | Sawyer

  3. #15
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    SF Bay Area
    Posts
    785
    I would do Isla nn Islie, because it seems easier to pronounce and I have a problem with proper names ending in -i, -ie, -ey, or -y, I prefer having them as nicknames, I don't know why (Probably don't seem like full, proper names to me). Plus, Isla is the most well known of all of these.
    Lillian Hermione Emilia-Isabelle Rosemarie Astrid-Hazel Daphne Evelyn-Elizabeth Luna Sadie

    Oliver Frederick James-Henry Cosmo Edmond-Jasper Milo Edison-Theodore Hugo Jack

  4. #17
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Location
    New Zealand
    Posts
    1,217
    Eislie

    ~Jasmine
    Jasmine

    Aurelia~Marian~Josie~Bronte~Heather~Michelle~Laura
    Weston~Robin

    Crushing On: Ceridwen~Arianwen

  5. #19
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
    Posts
    2,957
    Eilidh and "eye-lee" are two different names. To be honest "eye-lee" would not be my first thought for any of the spellings you listed.

    I always think it's funny when someone complains that Eilidh, Caoimhe, Siobhan, etc are not spelled the way they sound. That is because they are from a different language. You would think that would be obvious...

  6. #21
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    118
    Islie!!
    Some of my evolving favorites:

    Hermione Grey - Lola Meredith - Matilda Charlotte - Meredith Eloise - Verity Kate - Violet Athena

    Benjamin Michael - Burke Atticus - Chandler Michael - Cole Shepard - Jackson Rupert - Nolan James

  7. #23
    Join Date
    May 2012
    Posts
    866
    Quote Originally Posted by kala_way View Post
    I hate the original spelling. Sorry all those who love it, but in an American environment that spelling isn't seen as lovely and classic, it's seen as creative and cruel. It's not spelled remotely like it sounds.

    I like Eiley best though Isley is okay
    'Creative and cruel'? Why would anybody think that?? I'm sure Americans are aware of other languages outside English. Anyone with any common sense is going to realise 'Eilidh' is not a 'creative' spelling like 'Ayyleigh'.

  8. #25
    Join Date
    Mar 2012
    Posts
    1,082
    I would not pronounce any of those names in the poll as Ay-lee. If I saw Eilidh I would not even try to pronounce it, but the other spellings I would all mispronounce.

    Islie=eye-lee or is-lee
    Eislie=eye-lee
    Isley=is-lay, eye-lay, is-lee, or eye-lee
    Eiley=eye-lee
    Eilidh=no clue, maybe eyelid?

    My vote is go with the original spelling. There is no good phonetical spelling unless you literally write out how you want it pronounced, Aylee. I don't care for the sound of Aylee (regardless of spelling) but I love Eiley (eye-lee).

  9. #27
    Thanks for the input, we've decided to go with Eiley.

    Didn't mean to offend, just trying to figure out an anglicized spelling. Unfortunately, the fact is, if we spelled it the original way, which evidently is not prn like I thought, she'd forever be called eyelid or eyelid-ah here in the US.

    On an alternate note, I did find Eiley listed in a baby name book as an alternate form of Eileen. So either way, I believe it's real, and not a made up name.

  10. #29
    Join Date
    Mar 2012
    Posts
    1,082
    Quote Originally Posted by jeska View Post
    'Creative and cruel'? Why would anybody think that?? I'm sure Americans are aware of other languages outside English. Anyone with any common sense is going to realise 'Eilidh' is not a 'creative' spelling like 'Ayyleigh'.
    I would have to disagree. Eilidh and Ayyleigh both look like random letters thrown together to be "creative" and "unique"-and I do have common sense and I am aware English isn't the only language in the world.

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