A good appearance of a name - choosing a name is a serious matter

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I would stick with the names of the characters.

On the same website with our complicated name (aka the one I can't find a link to), I also came across a few methods to spruce up classic names to make them look more interesting and fanciful.


Method one: Doubling letters

Let's take the name, Barbara, for example. Bára for short (I am working with the Czech version here). I will move the comma away and I will have a Bara. I'll use the second tip) and I have Bär here. I add the second "b" and I get Bbära and if I add "r" and the second "a" then I have Bärraa (How it will be read is up to you).


Method two: ä, ë, ö, ü

I already used it with Bára when we created Bärraa.It could be read normally as "Bara", or using knowledge of the German language as "Bera".A lot of people would probably read it normally as "Bara", however those who speak German would read it as "Bera". The Chinese version sounds like a corruption of the name Bela (sounds like "Bejlá") and the Russian version sounds like "Bará".


Method Three: The Crayfish Method

Crayfish walk behind and that's exactly how this method works. It is a very interesting method and I had a period when I used this method quite often.I came up with an interesting version of the name Laura, Arula. I wrote the name backward and swapped the first two letters to make it sound better.


Method four: Word Generator

You enter letters and he creates words for you. You can also specify parameters to start or end with. It will create all kinds of words for you, but sometimes something interesting can appear there.


Method five: Transforming already existing names

Take an existing name and transform it (or if my explanatory sentence is the same as what is written in the title). 

Maybe we'll make George Sweater out of such a Harry Potter. (It makes more sense in my mother tongue)

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