Color me confused, because as far as I know, Bailey (and that is the accepted spelling) has only one pronunciation. Long a, long e. Accent goes on the first syllable.![]()
Yup, me too. Whether the "L" sound is technically part of the first syllable or the second, no one pauses between syllables when they say a name (or other word), so it comes out the same either way -- rhyming with daily, same as Bailey's Irish Cream and Bailey Quarters from WKRP in Cincinnati. And I've only ever seen it spelled Bailey, and only for girls.Color me confused, because as far as I know, Bailey (and that is the accepted spelling) has only one pronunciation. Long a, long e. Accent goes on the first syllable.![]()
Ack! More confusion!Her twin is Taylor (we pronounce it Tay-lor). I do get people that pronounce her name tailor...don't like that.
I pronouce it just like Bailey's Irish Cream. Bale-Lee
Personally, I love this name.
Let me take my confusion a step further. (I must confess that all this Bale-e and Bay-lee business is giving me a headache.) The two syllables are divided between the long a and the "l" sound.
In other words, the first syllable consists of the "b" and the long "a." This is the accented syllable. The second syllable consists of the "l" and the long "e." The first syllable rhymes with "day" and the second rhymes with words like "me, be and he."
If the first syllable included the "l" sound, then it would rhyme with "bail" as in "bail out out jail" or "bale of hay." It sounds awkward to say BALE-eee. BAY-lee flows much more smoothly....like the Bailey's Irish Cream someone mentioned. Perhaps everyone is actually saying it the same, just interpreting "Here's how I pronounce it," differently???
Think "daily." It rhymes with that.
That's the only way I've ever heard it pronounced.........
My daughter is Bailie
Personally, I just can't imagine an adult woman named Bailey -- in another generation, it's going to sound as dated as Sherry or Brandy (no offense to any Sherrys or Brandys who may be reading this -- I just never understood naming a baby girl after alcohol).
I think a lot of the pronunciation has to do with regional accents as well. There are plenty of words that are fall victim to this. What about Bostonians and their weird pronunciations of several words. I remember a post here several years ago about a mom that was upset because they had recently moved to the south and her DD got some words wrong on a spelling test because she spelled them the way she heard them.
I would spell it Bailey and pronounce it Bay-Lee. I have only seen Bailey used for girls names though.
Since creative spelling of names is a personal pet peeve of mine, I'd go with Bailey, although after reading the responses, I really don't know how I would pronounce it. Taylor and tailor are pronounced exactly the same here - my niece is Taylor, and even her mom calles her tailor.
I feel so dumb but even if I say it the 2 different ways out loud, I can't hear any difference, rofl. Good luck with your decision![]()
I'd love to know how tay-lor and tailor are pronounced differently. To me, it's the same thing.
Though my friend from New Jersey did have to explain why Mary, marry and merry sound different. To this Californian, they're said the exact same way!![]()
Yup, me too. Whether the "L" sound is technically part of the first syllable or the second, no one pauses between syllables when they say a name (or other word), so it comes out the same either way -- rhyming with daily, same as Bailey's Irish Cream and Bailey Quarters from WKRP in Cincinnati. And I've only ever seen it spelled Bailey, and only for girls.
Ack! More confusion!Tay-lor and tailor sound exactly the same to me, too!
It's hard to talk about this in writing, versus in person. I'd love to be able to hear the difference that some of you hear in these words.![]()
What about Don and Dawn? I'm unable to say those differently, but people swear to me there is a difference.
I like names spelled differently, I would spell baylee or baleigh or baylea
As for people who might spell her name wrong that on them. My name is Jenny and you wouldn't image how many people misspell that![]()
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I get Ginny Genny Jinny
Here in NJ, they are different - we pronounce the "w".