(way to go @avenmaide - when I had a quick go at one I thought gee, I might’ve gone too far!)
[name_m]Apollo[/name_m] [name_u]Cedar[/name_u], [name_m]Atlas[/name_m] [name_m]Birch[/name_m] and [name_f]Athena[/name_f] [name_f]Laurel[/name_f].
As luck would have it, [name_m]Ian[/name_m] and [name_u]Jessie[/name_u] are having triplets again.
Their first set were three boys named [name_m]Bear[/name_m] [name_m]Vidar[/name_m], [name_m]Fox[/name_m] [name_u]Arlo[/name_u] and [name_m]Wolf[/name_m] [name_u]Logan[/name_u].
Their new triplets are going to be three girls.
For their first names, they want a similar set of monosyllabic word names with a matching theme (anything OTHER THAN flower names).
Their middle names need to pull off the same trick as their brothers’ set: the first’s middle must end with the first syllable of the second’s, and the third’s middle must begin with the last syllable of the third’s. (Vidar-Arlo-Logan). These middle names must all be at least two syllables long.
Preferably, the second’s middle name is contained entirely within the first and third together, each name is pronounced with stress on the first syllable, and the first and third middle are the same number of syllables, as in the boy set.
Note that in this middle set, the matching syllables must be spelt AND pronounced the same way (e.g. [name_f]Winifred[/name_f]-[name_f]Edna[/name_f]-[name_f]Natalie[/name_f] would be allowed, but not [name_f]Winifred[/name_f]-[name_f]Edna[/name_f]-[name_m]Nathan[/name_m]).
They don’t mind whether each name is rare or common, but they would like each first/middle set to flow together with at least one common letter, as with the boys’.
v @emily_becca123 (Not sure I understand 2 things. 1, how the first syllable of Nathan, like Nate, is the same A sound as the Nat in “Natalie”? This isn’t an accent thing… I don’t know anyone who’d rhyme Nathan with “math” or Natalie with “mate” and my husband’s family have a variety of British accents. And 2, how “v” is a syllable? The only way this makes sense to me is if “Maeve” is pronounced “May-ev” or “May-eve”, which to my knowledge it never is. Are syllables this confusing or am I confused?)