I’ve actually researched these name issues pretty much every now and then,
but I’m sometimes a hopeless case because...
I take screenshots and links - but I don’t want to publish just oneliners,
so I expect to get more in a pile and then I can’t find them all when I need to,
but...
I will put here some facts that I remember finding so far......
Well there are
no Alizée names in
Estonia, I think it's still natural!
In addition, our other neighbors,
Denmark and
Norway, are
not known to have
Alizée names...
And what the heck,
there were only
two (2) women
named Alizee in
Sweden... [I remember so]
[Okay, I can't say how official and accurate these are, but among other things, Estonian statistics were obviously factual, etc.]
Here comes the core question... Why are there so many Alizée names in Finland compared to those other countries?
> I don't think it's normal in the big picture - but one reason may be that there are more accurate statistics here in Finland than in many other countries?
In addition, the findings show that there were only
a couple of the same name in the
Netherlands, etc.
An interesting finding,
on the other hand, was that the
whole name of Alizée was banned in
Germany until 2008 and after that,
apparently after an appeal/complaint, it was approved for use by the decision of the "Board of Traditional Names" ...
The biggest bomb of all
and at least a surprise to me was that
the names Alize / Alizeh are apparently really popular in some
Muslim countries or in
persian traditions...
-
Among other things, it even seems to be one of
Pakistan’s most popular names!
And it also means to them "
trade wind", but also "
joyfull"! (At least suitable for our Alizée!!!!
)
It could, in principle, be such a long tradition that it came from there to Europe, but at least the Alizée family probably has no concrete connection to them?