NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,040
You've missed a little something; there is a fada over the initial i. It's actually Líadan.
In Irish, a fada makes the vowel long, so it is properly pronounced lyah-dun.
The trad band by that name pronounces it as Lee-a-dun, so that usage is very common these days. Either way, the final vowel sound should be a schwa, not "anne". The stress is on the first syllable.
PS: If you want something that has a complementary sound, you might also consider Ailis (ay-lish) or Aine (awn-ya)? Also, anything that ends in "in" (een) is going to be a feminine diminuitive. There really are not that many Irish feminine names that begin with L, actually not that many Irish names at all that do. Liam isn't traditional, really; it is the Irish answer to the political incorrectness of William. (My Dad was named William for some bizarre reason; my grandmother never would admit to why. He was known as Liam as a child; otherwise he would have regularly been beaten to a pulp in his Catholic neighborhood.)
In Irish, a fada makes the vowel long, so it is properly pronounced lyah-dun.
The trad band by that name pronounces it as Lee-a-dun, so that usage is very common these days. Either way, the final vowel sound should be a schwa, not "anne". The stress is on the first syllable.
PS: If you want something that has a complementary sound, you might also consider Ailis (ay-lish) or Aine (awn-ya)? Also, anything that ends in "in" (een) is going to be a feminine diminuitive. There really are not that many Irish feminine names that begin with L, actually not that many Irish names at all that do. Liam isn't traditional, really; it is the Irish answer to the political incorrectness of William. (My Dad was named William for some bizarre reason; my grandmother never would admit to why. He was known as Liam as a child; otherwise he would have regularly been beaten to a pulp in his Catholic neighborhood.)