Ivy-Wren? Wren-Ivy? Iveryn?

[name_m]Just[/name_m] playing with these names because I like [name_u]Ivy[/name_u] but my fiance wants a longer name since he has a short name (think Ian) and [name_u]Wren[/name_u] is another shorter name I like so I just threw them together lol

Idk how I feel about double names so when saying Ivy-Wren I realized Iveryn is veryyy similar. I like the name [name_f]Ivery[/name_f] too which my fiance also doesn’t like so idk.

Thoughts? I know Iveryn is made up but is it a travestiegh?

iveryn is unique and no-frills cool! :mountain_snow:

my personal favorite of your choices is ivy-wren. it just sounds so sweet! maybe you’d like ivelle or ivelisse!

best of luck to you! :honey_pot:

:rofl:

I like Iveryn! She feels fresh and frill-free. A little bit edgy, but mostly quite breezy. I think Ivy-Wren is a lovely pair. Two uncommon but easily familiar names that pair so nicely together. A very green and springish name! A little garden.

Perhaps you’d also enjoy…
Irelyn or Ireland
Idalie
Wrenna (maybe Morwenna as well?)
Wednesday
Wrenley

[name_u]Love[/name_u] [name_f]Wrenna[/name_f], hadn’t considered it before, and [name_f]Idalie[/name_f] is cute but hard for me to say but I had a great grandma [name_f]Ida[/name_f] so [name_f]Idalia[/name_f] is on my list, I just tend to lean away from -a endings as I read them as overly femme. idk not expecting rn but I almost hope I’ll forever be a boy mom because I find [name_m]Boy[/name_m] names so much easier :sweat_smile:

maybe a little bit, haha. i’m not sure how to pronounce it, are you saying it like Ivy-Wren or like ive-ren?

i strongly prefer Ivy-Wren, i think it sounds and looks really lovely. since Ivy-Wren is easy to pronounce and spell, i think Iveryn is unnecessary. have you asked for your fiance’s opinion on Ivy-Wren?

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Ive-ren is how I would pronounce it. [name_f]My[/name_f] fiance said Ivy-Wren is “Okay” but he likes Iveryn kinda sounds like wyvern lol

Ivy-Wren is my favourite of the three! Wren-Ivy sounds a bit awkward out loud (to me at least!) and I’d be stumped on how to pronounce and spell Iveryn :sweat_smile:

I wanted to update y’all that Iveryn appears to be a real name, used at least twice as middle names on Ancestry (Late 1800s and early 1900s) and I found a facebook account attached to an Iveryn. So I think it’s just a very uncommon old name so IMO it’s useable. I personally pronounce it as Iver-rin but I think Ive-rin is more accurate.

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Iveryn is very cool! I like how it sounds. Ivy-Wren is really nice as well, I find it easier to say than Wren-Ivy

Another idea: I knew an Ivaly (pronounced like ivory with an L) and she wore it well! I like Iveryn better than Ivy-Wren personally. I prefer double barrel names non-hyphenated; I do like [name_u]Ivy[/name_u] [name_u]Wren[/name_u] as a first and middle or a double-barrel first.

Ivy-Wren is charming! I like it

I agree with all of what @venezio said

The [name_u]Ivy[/name_u] [name_u]Wren[/name_u] combos are too nouny together imo and Iveryn sounds like a medication to me. [name_u]Ivy[/name_u] and [name_u]Wren[/name_u] are lovely individually (even as first and middle), it’s just double barreling them I feel is too wordy.