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My name in Esperanto?

de Sinanthiel, 12 de diciembre de 2011

Aportes: 21

Idioma: English

Sinanthiel (Mostrar perfil) 12 de diciembre de 2011 10:29:00

So, my real name is Stephanie, and I was curious how I would "Esperantize" my name? I'm still a beginner, so I'm not sure what the Esperanto phonetic spelling would be. I would greatly appreciate any help! ridulo.gif Thank you.

Mevido (Mostrar perfil) 12 de diciembre de 2011 10:38:29

Maybe, "Stefanino"? rido.gif

Sinanthiel (Mostrar perfil) 12 de diciembre de 2011 10:40:08

Thank you! ridulo.gif I hope that works. ridulo.gif

hebda999 (Mostrar perfil) 12 de diciembre de 2011 11:28:06

Mevido:Maybe, "Stefanino"? rido.gif
Why not Stefania - we have Maria.

Mevido (Mostrar perfil) 12 de diciembre de 2011 11:52:45

"Stefania" looks like an Esperanto adjective, ĉu ne? okulumo.gif

Miland (Mostrar perfil) 12 de diciembre de 2011 12:10:18

Maybe Stefanja or even Stefja?

AnFu (Mostrar perfil) 13 de diciembre de 2011 01:49:21

Sinanthiel:So, my real name is Stephanie, and I was curious how I would "Esperantize" my name? ...what the Esperanto phonetic spelling would be...
To approximate the English *sound* of your name: Stefani. But the stress will be off: SteFAni.

And, of course, that spelling makes it look like a verb.

For an Esperanto translation of your name, I vote in favor of Mevido's "Stefanino" because it fits and works with Esperanto grammar, is instantly recognizable as the root name "Stefan-", that is feminine (due to the -in- suffix), and is a noun (due to the -o ). It seems likely that people will quickly and correctly understand "Stefanino", will not ask you to repeat and repeat your name, and will use that name correctly in both writing and speaking.

Evildela (Mostrar perfil) 13 de diciembre de 2011 01:56:46

I also agree with "Stefanino"
because of the following:

Stefano - would seem like stephen to me, and the idea of having a "a" at the end of a name has never sat well with me. So that just leaves Stefanino.

erinja (Mostrar perfil) 13 de diciembre de 2011 02:56:57

The option that no one has mentioned yet is use of the nickname suffix -nj- for women, -ĉj- for men.

You form the nickname by taking the first few letters of the name then adding -njo for a woman, or -ĉjo for a man.

That would make you "Stenjo" or "Stefanjo". Its up to you, how many letters of the original name that you keep, but I wouldn't recommend choosing "Stefnjo" - too hard to pronounce! (though I once met a "Ĝernjo" - that's a combination I wouldn't have chosen, myself).

It's clear that you're a woman because a man named Stefano would be using the -ĉj- suffix instead of -nj-, and he'd likely end up as "Steĉjo".

Sinanthiel (Mostrar perfil) 13 de diciembre de 2011 03:49:58

Thank you every one for the suggestions! So many sound good, and it's hard to decide. Stefanjo and Stefanja sounds good, or Stefanino. So, let me know which one you guys would choose. ridulo.gif

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