Rosalie and Juliet

I love each name individually, but together I hear ‘[name_m]Romeo[/name_m] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f]’

what does everyone else think?

I think it’s a great combo! A little like [name_m]Romeo[/name_m] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] but I only got that when you pointed it out.

I think they are great together. I didn’t think of [name_m]Romeo[/name_m] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] at all.
I would also use the french spelling of [name_f]Juliette[/name_f] to give it even more visual distance and tie it into the [name_m]French[/name_m] [name_f]Rosalie[/name_f]!

Now that you mention it, I do think of [name_m]Romeo[/name_m] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f], but before that I didn’t at all.

[name_m]Romeo[/name_m] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] didn’t even cross my mind until you mentioned it

I think they make a great sibling set. Like [name_f]Rosie[/name_f], [name_m]Romeo[/name_m] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] did not cross my mind until it was mentioned, and barely hear it after that.

I more thought of the line in romeo and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] about a rose by another name being just as sweet so saw a subtle R&J reference. I think they’re totally usable together!

That hadn’t even crossed my mind until you mentioned it!

I didn’t even think about it until you mentioned it. I like PP’s suggestion of the spelling [name_f]Juliette[/name_f] to match [name_f]Rosalie[/name_f]! :slight_smile:

[name_f]Lovely[/name_f] together!

It did make me think of [name_m]Romeo[/name_m] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] not because it sounds the same, but because [name_m]Romeo[/name_m] fancied a girl named [name_f]Rosaline[/name_f] before he met [name_f]Juliet[/name_f]. I really don’t think this is a reference most people will get though. [name_f]Rosalie[/name_f] and [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] make a beautiful sibset. :slight_smile:

I think they’re fine together. [name_f]Lovely[/name_f] names, too.
You could always refer to the sisters as [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] and [name_f]Rosalie[/name_f] (especially if [name_f]Juliet[/name_f] is older). I know that “[name_f]Juliet[/name_f] and her [name_m]Romeo[/name_m]” comes up in R & J, but I don’t think the connection is as strong if the names are said that way around. If you pronounce [name_f]Rosalie[/name_f] with a strong emphasis on the last syllable (i.e. roz-uh-[name_u]LEE[/name_u], rather than ROh-suh-lee or [name_f]ROZ[/name_f]-uh-lee), that takes it even further from the sound of [name_m]Romeo[/name_m] (ROh-mee-oh).

Thanks for the input! I do are the spelling of [name_f]Juliette[/name_f]!