- [name_f][/name_f]
- I like [name_m]Dmitri[/name_m] a lot! [name_f][/name_f] [name_f]My[/name_f] grandma had some very meaningful ties to [name_f]Russia[/name_f], so for that reason I’m not against using it, but I prefer it as a middle in general because the average person doesn’t seem to spell [name_m]Dmitri[/name_m] the same way I do—or at minimum, it just seems like nobody can agree on an [name_f]English[/name_f] spelling? [name_f][/name_f] I met one through work a while back and was so excited lol. [name_f][/name_f]
- I do think it is usable but might need some explanations? [name_f][/name_f] [name_m]Demetrius[/name_m] seems to be much more used across cultures, maybe [name_m]Demetrius[/name_m] nn [name_m]Dmitri[/name_m] if just [name_m]Dmitri[/name_m] seems too hard? [name_f][/name_f]
- Besides [name_m]Demetrius[/name_m], [name_m]Didier[/name_m] has a similar visual appeal for me. [name_f][/name_f] Stylistically, [name_m]Vladimir[/name_m], [name_m]Kasimir[/name_m], [name_m]Valdemar[/name_m], [name_m]Vitali[/name_m], Evgeniy, [name_m]Anton[/name_m], and maybe [name_m]Ruslan[/name_m] have a similar feel to me? [name_f][/name_f] [name_m]Kasimir[/name_m] and [name_m]Anton[/name_m] feel the most usable, maybe [name_m]Ruslan[/name_m] too. [name_f][/name_f] [name_f]Or[/name_f] [name_m]Boris[/name_m] if your image of him wasn’t tainted by the [name_f]British[/name_f] PM

[name_f][/name_f]
Good luck!