My DH and I are expecting our third daughter very soon, and although we haven’t chosen a final name, we have a top three. [name]Cecily[/name] is one of the three names we’re seriously considering.
We just can’t find a middle name that goes well with it!
Our two daughters are [name]Odette[/name] [name]Seraphina[/name] and [name]Acacia[/name] [name]Penelope[/name]. We want a middle name similar is style, and 3-4 syllables. Pease no names that start with A, C, P, O, or S. We want our girls to have different initials.
So similar, classic, little bit English sounding longish middle names, what about …
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Isadora[/name]
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Violetta[/name]
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Rosetta[/name]
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Delilah[/name]
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Estella[/name]
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Tallulah[/name]
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Esmerelda[/name] (not so English, but longer) and I assume you dont like this one as I’ve previously suggested it, but I like…
[name]Cecily[/name] [name]Bellatrix[/name] (sooo cute!)
I also like the previous suggestion of [name]Cecily[/name] [name]Theodora[/name]
We love the suggestions of [name]Madeleine[/name], [name]Georgiana[/name], [name]Violetta[/name], [name]Evangeline[/name], and [name]Beatrice[/name]/[name]Bellatrix[/name]!
Although I adore [name]Genevieve[/name], I think it’s a little rhymey when paired with [name]Cecily[/name] :(.
DH really likes [name]Cecily[/name] [name]Madeleine[/name] :).
I love [name]Cecily[/name] [name]Victoria[/name] and [name]Cecily[/name] [name]Beatrice[/name].
Thanks for all the amazing help and keep it coming if you want! We’d love more suggestions!
my daughter’s name is [name_f]Cecily[/name_f] [name_f]Noelle[/name_f]. I thought it rolls nicely. Also [name_f]Noelle[/name_f] fits in nicely with my first name “[name_f]Arielle[/name_f]”. Her dad is [name_m]Joseph[/name_m]. [name_f]Arielle[/name_f] is nearly unheard of (airy-L) and [name_m]Joseph[/name_m] is super common. So we chose [name_f]Cecily[/name_f], which is uncommon but not unheard of. It is also a very old fashioned English variation of [name_f]Cecilia[/name_f], which has become over-common of late. English, not British. Of [name_f]England[/name_f]. One of the old English ladies commented that [name_f]Cecily[/name_f] Tibbles sounds like a little old English lady. Then she met the oh so American parents of Princecily. I laughed a lot.