« Reply #89 on: Tuesday 05 July 05 08:16 BST (UK) »
My first child, a boy, was named Tomas Emilio. Tomas after my grandfather and several other ancestors, but spelt the Spanish way as my husband is originally Spanish. Emilio is after his father and grandfather.
My three daughters are Ines May, Olivia Estefania and Isabel Esther. Their first names were traditional names we liked and which are pronouced the same in Spanish and English. Their middle names are from their great grandmothers.
I like it when all the children in the family have names of a similiar 'genre'. such as all traditional English names, all victorian names, all trendy names or all biblical names, somehow it just seems to sound better. I don't like it when phoenetically a name is the same as one you know but the parents have thought of some way out spelling believing it is different, I think they just make it difficult for the child and everybody else.
Faricy - Lancs.
Faricy, Gardner, Jones, Aldred, Battersby, Calland, Webb, Jones,Evans - Hindley, Lancs
Coleman, Price, Taylor, Ryan, Joyce, Barrett, Astin - Oldham/Failsworth, Lancs
Gardner, Evans, Jones, Williams,Sambrook, Davies,Wardman,Ellis - Montgomeryshire/Worthern,Salop
Price, Thomas, Jones - Chester/Flint
Jones,Webb,Griffiths,Bagshaw,Bowen,Richards, - Dawley/Wellington,Salop
Faricy - Waterford/Cork - Ireland
Faricy, Robles - Austalia