T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
47.1 | ANOTHER MEGHAN | 6217::HMAY | | Tue Oct 07 1986 10:14 | 10 |
|
We too have a daughter named Meghan, my husband had decided this
name before she was even concieved. The name as far as we know
comes form the Irish decent, and seeing as we love old names thinking
that we would never here of the name on another child we named her
this. Her initials leave something to be desired (MGM) standing
for Meghan Gray May. (by the way, I don't know if your Meghan is
hyper but our's never stops)
HMAY
|
47.2 | MEAGHAN | 9449::ENGDAHL | | Mon Oct 20 1986 13:43 | 5 |
|
My name is Meaghan (pronounced Mee-gan). The name is of Celtic
origin. It is the Irish equivalent of Margaret, as you obviously
alreay know.
|
47.3 | MEGARA | 24955::TAYLOR | | Wed Jul 15 1987 13:38 | 2 |
| Quite a while ago when I was a child, I remember a very good friend
of mine who's name was Megara which is somewhat like Meghan.
|
47.4 | | MPGS::COLLAMATI | | Thu Oct 15 1987 14:58 | 8 |
| MEGHANN
I know a girl whose name is Meghann. ( May-gen ) It is spelled
like that because her parents wanted her grandmothers name to be
a part of their child's name. If it was a boy it would have been
Andrew.
Kimberly Ann
|
47.5 | Megara | CLOVAX::SARANITA | | Thu Mar 24 1988 12:14 | 15 |
|
RE: .3
My cousin-in-law's little girl is named Megara, I had never heard
it
before, I thinkk it's pretty.
My sister i due in 2 weeks and if it's a girl, they'll name it Meghan
Lee McHugh
I quess it's pretty popular these days!
Loreen
|
47.6 | Meaghan is Irish ??? Don't think so. | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Many hands make bytes work | Thu Mar 24 1988 12:26 | 7 |
| After looking in a couple of noted references, I discovered that
Megan is actually Welsh....
The addition of the h to make Meghan is later and an 'Anglicised'
version.
The spelling variant Meaghan is apparently of American origin and
is not Irish at all. Apparently there is no record of Meaghan as
a given name in Ireland!
|
47.7 | IT'S A GIRL!!! | CLOVAX::KOBILARCSIK | | Wed Apr 13 1988 09:53 | 16 |
|
My sister had her baby on April 10th, it's a girl!!!! and they named
her Meghan Leigh McHugh (i spelled Leigh wrong in .5) .
Of course she's beautiful and already very irish looking , a mop
of black hair and blue eyes.
re. -1,
could you kindly take a moment to explain the differnece between
Welsh and Irish origin's to the noters, You're the third or fourth
person who's corrected Irish nmaes by saying that they are really
Welsh. My grandmother (who was born in County KilleKenney, Ireland)
would like to know the diffference too, she says Meghan is as Irish
as she is....
Loreen
|
47.8 | On origins | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Many hands make bytes work | Wed Apr 13 1988 11:04 | 38 |
| re .7
I'm afraid that I don't have the particular references to hand at
the moment (had to take them back to the library) but I will gladly
have another look: one was an Oxford publication, the other was
published in the USA.
From what I can remember of both references though they went something
like this:
The earliest recorded use of the name was found in Wales and spelled
Megan (pronunciation would be with a short 'e' like peg).
It appeared significantly later in England and was spelled with
an 'h' as Meghan. (The addition of the 'h' probably serves to
reinforce the pronunciation of the short 'e')
The spelling "Meaghan" was purported to be of Irish origin but no
traces of this spelling were found in Ireland but were instead found
in the USA, where the pronunciation took on one of two forms:
one as if spelled "May-gn", the other with a long e as if spelled
"Meegan".
So, from that, I would conclude that Meghan may well be widely used
in Ireland but that it's earliest recorded references are not there,
but in England, that Megan is Welsh, and that Meaghan is American.
One of my 2nd daughter's middle names is Megan, so I did do a fair
bit of looking into its history.
Hope this is helpful ... please understand that I am not trying
to deny anyone their heritage!
And by the way, Congratulations to the Aunt!
stuart
|
47.9 | fierce pride of race never to be swayed | CIVIC::JOHNSTON | I _earned_ that touch of grey! | Fri May 06 1988 16:38 | 20 |
| wellll...what's Welsh/Irish/Scots ?
my four Celtic grandparents [2 Irish, 1 Welsh, 1 Scots] - all native
speakers of the auld languages - used to really have a go-round
on this one.
My grandmother, Siobhan, affirmed that her sister, Meghann had an
IRISH name as old as Donegal, the name having been handed down to
the eldest daughter of every other generation for, and I quote,
"centuries without number."
Her husband, Evan, would rebut that the Irish were a lot given to
needless ruffles and flourishes and just tossed the "H" and the
extra "N" into a good WELSH name to make it _look_ Irish.
My other grandfather [Irish] said it was "too ugly a name to argue
about." His wife [Scots] opined that his cousin Meghann was probably
the cause.
Ann
|
47.10 | Siobhan | EDUHCI::WARREN | | Fri May 06 1988 17:03 | 2 |
| How is Siobhan pronounced? Any background on that one?
|
47.11 | | VLNVAX::OSTIGUY | | Thu May 19 1988 07:47 | 5 |
| Siobhan is pronounced, Chifvon, close to the fabric, chiffon.
It was my high school girlfriend's name. Very Irish.
Anna
|
47.12 | Yet another spelling for Megan | WHYVAX::FINAN | | Mon Jul 25 1988 09:31 | 17 |
| Here's another spelling for the name - my daughter, born 2-27-87, is
Megann Adele Finan. Her name is a combination of her grandmothers'
names. Her paternal Grandmother is Margaret, her maternal grandmother,
Adele. My mom died a couple of years before Megann was born and
since Megann would never get to meet her I wanted her to have her
name. Since I've always associated Adele with an older person,
I didn't want it to be her first name, so we chose it as her middle
and looked for a suitable first name. My husband and I like
Irish names (he's all Irish, I'm half Irish, half French - like
Megann's name) so we came up with Erin and Megan. Megann won
because it sounded better with Adele and because it was a form
of her mother's name so she wasnt named after only one Grandmother.
Since Megan seems to be getting popular we chose a different
spelling - my mom did the same for my name and I always liked it.
Robyn Finan
|
47.13 | Meighan | TOWNS::DORNAN | | Wed Apr 18 1990 14:14 | 14 |
| Hi!
I just found this conference & have found the discussions very
interesting. My sister-in-law's name is Meighan. When her mother
was expecting, she was looking for a good Irish name for a girl and
she went to the local convent and asked the nuns what some of the
Irish names were for girls (some of the nuns were from Ireland).
She had seen Megan, but they told her it a was an American version
of the name and Meighan was the correct spelling.
From what I have read in this note, no one has mentioned this spelling.
Has anyone ever seen it before?
Sue (short for Susan)
|
47.14 | | WMOIS::R_MONTGOMERY | Savin' the Best for Last | Thu Apr 19 1990 08:41 | 8 |
|
We're considering that name for our baby, if it's a girl. I was told
that the Irish spelling was Meaghan.
I guess the nuns from Ireland should know! hee hee
Robin
|
47.15 | German?? | AIMHI::WHITENECK | | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:42 | 7 |
| My husband wanted a unique name for our female german shephard puppy.
He thought the name Meghan was german and kind of masculine - so that
turned out to be our dog's name.
So much for male perception!
L
|