Brigitte or Cosima?

See the results of this poll: Which name do you prefer?

Respondents: 55 (This poll is closed)

  • Brigitte : 29 (53%)
  • Cosima: 26 (47%)

I like [name]Brigitte[/name] [name]Katherine[/name]

[name]Cosima[/name] all the way! [name]Brigitte[/name] flows better with the middles, but [name]Cosima[/name] is just too gorgeous not to vote for.

[name]Cosima[/name] [name]Mary[/name]-[name]Kate[/name] would be super cute! I do like [name]Cosima[/name] as a first name, much more than [name]Brigitte[/name]. Although, [name]Cosima[/name] [name]Brigitte[/name] flows nicely together.

Definitely [name]Cosima[/name]!

[name]Brigitte[/name] goes better with [name]Eleanor[/name]. Though of the two [name]Cosima[/name] would have been my pick.

[name]Cosima[/name] [name]Mary[/name]!!!

[name]Cosima[/name], because it’s more feminine and dainty and I love “a” endings. But neither [name]Mary[/name] nor [name]Katherine[/name] work too well with it- the same hard consonant beginning as [name]Katherine[/name], repeated “ma” in [name]CosiMA[/name] [name]MAry[/name]. With [name]Brigitte[/name], I would do [name]Brigitte[/name] [name]Marie[/name] (sounds very French, in a good way)!

If you’re trying to honour a [name]Mary[/name] or [name]Katherine[/name], what about [name]Cosima[/name] [name]Wren[/name] (similar to ending of [name]Katherine[/name]), [name]Cosima[/name] [name]Molly[/name] or [name]Cosima[/name] [name]Polly[/name]?

[name]How[/name] do you say [name]Cosima[/name]? Is it [name]Coz[/name]-ee-ma?

I love them both but went with [name]Cosima[/name], simply because a [name]Brigitte[/name] in an English speaking country would constantly be correcting people, “its not [name]Bridget[/name], its [name]Brigitte[/name].” But [name]Brigitte[/name] flows better with your middles.

[name]Love[/name] them both, but prefer [name]Cosima[/name].

Hmmm… I’m still not totally sure. Which one do you think goes better with [name]Eleanor[/name]? I don’t really mind if the flow is off. The combos would probably be [name]Eleanor[/name] [name]Mary[/name] & [name]Cosima[/name] [name]Katherine[/name] or [name]Eleanor[/name] [name]Katherine[/name] and [name]Brigitte[/name] [name]Mary[/name].

I don’t think either one really goes with [name]Eleanor[/name], but they sort of…don’t go with [name]Eleanor[/name] equally, if that makes sense. I guess [name]Cosima[/name] sounds similarly aristocratic and British, if that’s what you’re going for.