See the results of this poll: Kathleen (Kate) and
Respondents: 61 (This poll is closed)
- Eliza : 16 (26%)
- Elizabeth (Eliza) : 18 (30%)
- Jillian : 7 (11%)
- Ariana : 3 (5%)
- Lillian (Lily): 17 (28%)
Respondents: 61 (This poll is closed)
I love [name_f]Eliza[/name_f] with [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f]. I also like [name_f]Elizabeth[/name_f], but less so.
I think they have the same classic qualities that your other names don’t have, but are also not too matchy.
I love [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f] and [name_f]Lillian[/name_f] as a pair! It’s a combination I would never have considered, but works perfectly. Both names are instantly recognisable but somehow under the radar, and the subtle similarities such as repeated ‘l’ sounds and a shared ‘n’ ending ties them together nicely as twin names without being constrictively similar. I think if you’re going to nickname one twin, you should probably nickname the other; and [name_f]Kate[/name_f] and [name_f]Lily[/name_f] is a darling combination. My second choice would be [name_f]Elizabeth[/name_f] nicknamed [name_f]Eliza[/name_f], but it doesn’t have the same natural flow as [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f] and [name_f]Lillian[/name_f] does for me!
I like [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f] and [name_f]Eliza[/name_f]! [name_f]Kate[/name_f] and [name_f]Eliza[/name_f] sound great together. I would like [name_f]Kate[/name_f] and [name_f]Lily[/name_f] too, but [name_f]Lillian[/name_f] and [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f] is too many “-n” endings for me.
I love [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f] and [name_f]Elizabeth[/name_f] together, and [name_f]Kate[/name_f] and [name_f]Eliza[/name_f] too. Both are classic names with established nicknames so they complement each other well stylistically, but sound distinct from each other.
[name_f]Kathleen[/name_f] and [name_f]Eliza[/name_f] would make great siblings. They give me a similar spunky vibe.
With [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f] [name_f]Eliza[/name_f] seems like a very good fit, I coukd see [name_f]Jillian[/name_f] as well.
My favorite name off your list is [name_f]Ariana[/name_f], but either [name_f]Elizabeth[/name_f] or [name_f]Lillian[/name_f] go better with [name_f]Kathleen[/name_f].