Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Bristol Post
Bristol Post
World
Courtney Pochin & William Morgan

'People keep pronouncing my baby's name wrong - they think she is a boy'

There is no end to the different spellings and pronunciations of people's names, with some parents choosing to get creative and invent a new-sounding moniker for their children. This can often make names tricky to get right at first, and will often need a quick correction.

You would think that this means having a traditional name makes getting the pronunciation right fairly easy, but one Mumsnet user has claimed otherwise, with her two children's "classic" names often being butchered or garbled - even leading to her baby being mistaken for a boy.

The Mirror reports that the mum has claimed that the "classic" names she gave to her two daughters are always being mispronounced by strangers and she can't get over the different ways people say them.

READ MORE: The story of Bristol's long lost city centre in 18 pictures

Writing on Mumsnet, the unnamed parent explained that she'd named her children Beatrix and Lois.

She shares how she thought they were "two classic names with a single settled pronunciation each, with minimal room for misinterpretation".

However, she's come to realise that she was wrong.

The mum first explains how she and her partner pronounce their children's names as 'bee-uh-trix' and 'lo-iss', but others often say 'beet-rix' and 'Loyce'.

She continued: "I usually let the first go as I just think 'close enough', but I can't resist correcting 'Loyce'."

But the most unexpected mispronunciation occurs when her daughter Lois is mistaken for a boy and called "Lewis".

"Beatrix is sometimes also called 'Beatrice', which is an understandable mix-up that we did expect but is annoying when even family do it, and Lois is often misheard as 'Lewis' so that people assume she's a boy," the mum adds.

Her post prompted other parents to share the ways their children's names had been mispronounced.

One replied: "I have an Emilia. Technically she should be em-ee-lee-ya but people often and usually say Amelia. But they're so closely sounding I really don't care."

Another said: "My daughter has mentioned that she occasionally gets 'Jean' from Leanne. Lee-anne...who would have guessed that one?"

A third added: "I have a Louis - as in French 'Lou ee'. A classic name but in UK he gets called Lou-IS. Drives me mad. Luckily we now live in a French-speaking country so everyone gets it! However, that brings new challenges with daughter's name!"

READ NEXT:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.