What are some unusual [name_u]Anne[/name_u]'s you’ve heard?
I know a [name_f]Jordanna[/name_f]. Also, a Deloranda which is definitely unusual but not sure if it meets the “Anne” criteria.
Morgana, [name_f]Roxanne[/name_f], [name_f]Joanne[/name_f], [name_f]Leanne[/name_f], [name_f]Johanna[/name_f], [name_f]Hannah[/name_f], [name_u]Anne[/name_u]-[name_u]Marie[/name_u], [name_f]Anneliese[/name_f], [name_f]Anastasia[/name_f], [name_f]Anabel[/name_f], [name_f]Deanna[/name_f], [name_f]Roseanne[/name_f], [name_f]Marianne[/name_f], [name_f]Anna[/name_f]-[name_f]Sofia[/name_f], [name_f]Annette[/name_f], [name_f]Ariana[/name_f], [name_f]Oriana[/name_f].
AnneMarie
[name_f]Annalise[/name_f]
RaeAnn
[name_f]Lianne[/name_f]
In portuguese, Ana - names are very traditional (I’m Ana Caroline, for eg., very 90’s), and there are some very pretty combinations. To name a few:
Ana Clara
Ana Maria
Ana Luisa
Ana Sofia
Ana Teresa
Ana Beatriz
Ana Terra (literary, terra means earth)
Ana Flor (meaning flower. Maria Flor is also popular)
-ana names are also very common, and it was widely used in feminizations in the 90’s and 80’s:
Mariana (classic)
Jordana, as mentioned (totally 90’s)
Luciana
Juliana
Adriana
Ariana
Luana (a bit dated as well)
Caetana (trending, very ˜chic˜)
I like most of them, but tend to prefer “-a” feminizations instead of -ana" (Julia instead of Juliana, Lucia for Luciana etc).