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I have had [name_f] Imogen [/name_f] on my short list for as long as I remember, however I put a nix to it after I noticed it was receiving a load of negative feedback on a whole host of sites. Although I didn’t let it bother me before, it’s made me question if it’s a good name or if it’s something to avoid. In [name_f]England[/name_f] (where I live), it’s a familiar name that is used quite often and it wasn’t thought of negatively (or so I thought). So I was wondering if those who ... I have a beautiful [name_f] Imogen [/name_f], and she has been Idge since before she was born and the name has travelled with her for 16 years, most people don’t know her as [name_f] Imogen [/name_f]! imogen pros +4 such different vibes than imogene! it gives off a calmer, more peaceful vibe to me, which i’m really liking right now, a bit more than imogene’s vibes +4 the shakespeare reference +10 it goes better with almost all of the names i like! a well-matched sibset matters a lot to me. +8 i can imagine myself with a baby imogen one day in the future as far as that goes, it just feels right +3 my favorite nickname for imogene/ imogen , mim, makes more sense to me sound-wise, for some ... They don’t have the same pronunciation. [name] Imogen [/name] is im-uh-jen, [name]Imogene [/name] is im-uh-jean. I prefer [name] Imogen [/name], my sister prefers [name]Imogene [/name]. I admit [name]Genie [/name] is a cute nickname, though. [name]Imogene [/name] is more popular in the States, [name] Imogen [/name] is all but unheard of there, [name] Imogen [/name] is in the Top 50 in Australia and is as far as I know also popular in the UK. I would not use the spelling of one and the ...