I know [name]Sophie[/name]/[name]Sophia[/name] is popular and so is [name]Rose[/name] as a middle name. But I just read something about a young woman , her brother, and a friend who stood up against hilter as young [name]German[/name] people, and all three were beheaded, but she saw her parents before her beheading, she smiled, and believed in God majorly, and had a heart for people. Her name was [name]Sophie[/name] Scholl. you may have heard of her and her brothers group. White [name]Rose[/name], it was tended to let people and the youth know what was happening. i like [name]Sophie[/name] [name]Rose[/name] or [name]Sophie[/name] Albarose (White rose) thoughts and ideas.
Your reasonings for liking the names is wonderful, but I still am not a fan of [name]Sophia[/name] [name]Rose[/name]. It completely lacks any specialness to me, and [name]Sophia[/name]'s incredibly boring imo.
Perhaps you can honor them by using the meanings.
Instead of [name]Rose[/name] - [name]Rosalie[/name] or [name]Rose[/name] as a first name, or [name]Rosie[/name] in the middle.
Instead of [name]Sophie[/name] or [name]Sophia[/name] use [name]Ophelia[/name] which is a similar feel and has the oph in it as well. [name]Ophelia[/name] [name]Rosalie[/name] is gorgeous imo!
I like [name]Sophie[/name] Albarose
Although it is a very popular combination, it is absolutely beautiful and the fact that it would have a special meaning takes the “ordinariness” out of it, at least it would for me.
I like [name]Sophia[/name] [name]Magdalena[/name] Scholl’s middle name better than her first, just aesthetically.
[name]Rose[/name] is more interesting to me as a first name than [name]Sophia[/name] is, just due to comparative rarity as a first name. And it would carry on at the forefront the movement she was a figurehead of, rather than just being her relatively innocuous and anonymous first name.
I loved that idea if you wanted to honour the Scholl’s group you could always name her [name]Vivienne[/name] [name]Rose[/name] as it translates to White [name]Rose[/name], just like the anti-Nazi group.
I loved that idea if you wanted to honour the Scholl’s group you could always name her [name]Vivienne[/name] [name]Rose[/name] as it translates to White [name]Rose[/name], just like the anti-Nazi group.
I had actually thought of doing the same thing for [name]Sophie[/name]; but instead now I am going to use a few names off of Schindler’s real list and honour them instead.
That sounds like a good compramise. I’ve read about [name]Sophie[/name] Scholl too, and she was such a great role model. I was always horrified by her ending. Using her as inspiration is great.
- [name]Athena[/name]
[name]Vivienne[/name] means “life, live”? Which could be nice symbolically too but unlike [name]Blanche[/name]/[name]Bianca[/name]/[name]Alba[/name] etc. as far as I know doesn’t mean “white?”
What do you think of just [name]Alba[/name] [name]Rose[/name]? I think that’s really pretty! [name]Sophia[/name] [name]Rose[/name] is beauitful, but so overused. :\
[name]Alba[/name] [name]Rose[/name] by itself would be a lovely, meaningful choice.
Q
[name]Ah[/name]… [name]Vivienne[/name]/[name]Vivian[/name] is a generally male name derived from the Latin vivus, meaning alive. As a woman’s name it is also an Alglicised form of the Celtic [name]Beibhinn[/name], meaning “white lady.”
Oooh. Thanks! I didn’t know that.
No problem!