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Monthly Archives: February 2012

Famous Name: Gunner

22 Wednesday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

dog names, english names, famous namesakes, military terms, scandinavian names, slang terms, stage names, vocabulary names

Sunday February 19 marked the 70th anniversary of the bombing of Darwin by the Japanese. Both the first and the single largest attack against Australia by a foreign power, it is often referred to as “Australia’s Pearl Harbor”. However, Darwin was bombed more heavily than Pearl Harbor, and almost 100 air raids were to follow. Numbers of the dead are disputed, but the official toll is just under 300, with maybe 300 to 400 injured. Amongst the casualties were men on the USS Peary, whose memorial President Obama visited in Darwin last year.

One of the lesser-known heroes of the Darwin air raids was a young black and white kelpie, who was found distressed and with a broken leg under a bombed mess hut on February 19 1942. He was taken to a field hospital, and immediately inducted into the Australian Air Force so that he could receive medical treatment. He was named Gunner, and given the serial number 0000.

Leading Aircraftman Percy Westcott, one of two men who found Gunner, became the dog’s master and handler. I think Gunner was just expected to be a pet and a mascot for the air base, and probably a much-needed distraction for the men. However, about a week after he came to live with them, Gunner began to demonstrate his remarkable hearing skills.

Time and time again, Gunner would whine and jump whenever he heard Japanese aircraft approaching. Long before the air raid siren sounded, Gunner would become agitated and head for shelter. He was able to warn Air Force personnel that the Japanese planes were coming up to 20 minutes before they appeared on the radar, and was so reliable that Percy was given permission to sound an alarm whenever Gunner gave his signal.

You’d think that living on an airbase, Gunner would soon get used to the sound of planes taking off and landing, but he only behaved like this when he heard Japanese planes – Allied ones didn’t faze him at all.

Gunner was accepted as a full member of the Air Force: he slept under Percy’s bunk, showered with the men, attended the movies with them, and regularly went up with pilots during practice flights.

Percy was posted to Melbourne 18 months later, and Gunner remained with the RAAF in Darwin, being cared for by the Air Force butcher, who had access to plenty of meat to feed Gunner. It’s not known what happened to Gunner when the war ended; I hope he lived a long happy life.

In the Air Force, the gunner is the person who operates the machine gun or cannon during air battles, although a Gunner is also any non-commissioned member of the air force in a Regiment. It’s often used as a slang term in several different ways, including in sport – for example, the word Gunner describes a certain specialist in gridiron, and the Gunners is a nickname for Arsenal Football Club. Gunners is also slang for a fans of the rock band Guns ‘n’ Roses.

Gunner has been used as a stage name in professional wrestling, such as by Gunner Scott (real name Brent Albright). It also sounds like the Scandinavian name Gunnar, which combines the elements for “war” and “warrior” together, to sound extra-warlike.

I’m not sure I would have suggested this as a possible baby name, except that I saw a baby called Gunner Phoenix in an Adelaide birth announcement last month.

I can see this as a wonderful way to honour a military connection in a family. Gunner sounds all boy … although according to some people, it sounds all dog! But we have established that the line between dog and human names has become increasingly blurred, and if you were going to give your baby the name of a dog, then what cooler canine than an Australian kelpie who became a wartime hero?

(Gunner’s story appears in the book Animal Heroes, by Anthony Hill. Photo of Gunner with Percy held by the Australian War Memorial)

Catch-Up Celebrity Baby News

22 Wednesday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

I still seem to be catching up with celebrity babies of 2011:

Fashion buyer Yasmin Sewell, and her partner Kyle Robinson, welcomed a son in October last year named Knox Rocket Robinson. Yasmin and Kyle discussed names for the entire pregnancy, and after their son was born, spent a few days narrowing it down from a very diverse list. However, they now feel Knox Rocket is absolutely right for him.

Yasmin is regarded as the most powerful fashion buyer in London. Her London boutique was patronised by celebrities, and she has worked for both Brown’s and Liberty’s. Currently, she writes a blog for Vogue and has her own consultancy. Last month she received Britain’s Young Australian of the Year Award, at the same Australia House dinner where Barry Humphries got the main prize. She was briefly married to Australian-British actor Rufus Sewell; her name before that was Yasmin Abdallah.

Kyle Robinson is a fellow expatriate Australian, and owns a fashion showroom called Paper Mache Tiger. Yasmin and Kyle were married shortly before Yasmin’s prize-giving ceremony.

Another fashion story from 2011 that I seem to have totally missed, so oblivious am I to the world of style:

Sydney fashion PR boss Roxy Jacenko, and her fiancé, stockbroker Oliver Curtis, welcomed a daughter named Pixie-Rose in August last year. Roxy has since become (in)famous for taking three hours maternity leave, being attached to her Blackberry that soon after giving birth.

Roxy is the head of fashion PR company Sweaty Betty, which once employed Geoff Huegill’s wife Sara (oddly enough I first heard about this PR firm on Elea’s blog, British Baby Names). Roxy recently wrote a glossy-type novel called Strictly Confidential, in which all the characters are thinly-disguised portraits of Sydney identities.

Oliver is the son of multi-millionaire Nicholas Curtis, the founder of Sino Resources and executive chairman of the Lynas Corporation. Last year Oliver was investigated for insider trading, but no charges were laid against him. However, his best friend who passed him the tips and who made 1.9 million dollars in illegal profits has been gaoled for 4 and a half years.

Roxy and Oliver are set to marry next month.

Celebrity Baby News: Billy and Tracy James

21 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Surfers Paradise property entrepreneur Billy James, and his wife Tracy, welcomed a son named William James Jnr on February 17. Billy and Tracy have a three-year-old daughter together called Seylah, and William is Billy’s fifith child.

Billy is the founder of iconic Gold Coast pub Billy’s Beach House, and recently let it be known that he will be running for councillor in the local elections.

We’ve had a number of stories on mature mothers on the blog, and here is one on a mature-age father – Billy is 64. He doesn’t mind the sleepless nights, and enjoys getting up for baby William; he says that as an older parent, you stop and appreciate it all the more.

Celebrity Baby News: Lucinda Dunn and Danilo Radojevic

20 Monday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

This is another late news celebrity baby story:

Ballet dancer Lucinda Dunn, and her husband, Danilo Radojevic, welcomed their second daughter, Ava, at the end of last year. Ava joins big sister Claudia, aged 3.

Lucinda was classically trained in London and joined the The Australian Ballet at the age of 17. In 2002, she was promoted to Principal Artist, and now holds the record for the company’s longest-serving ballerina. She celebrated her twentieth anniversary with the ballet company in July 2011; as she was pregnant at the time, celebrations were low-key. Danilo is the Associate Artistic Director of The Australian Ballet.

Lucinda has just returned from maternity leave, and has no plans to retire from ballet. Incidentally, I wonder whether the elegant Ms Dunn is helping to boost the popularity of the name Lucinda?

Girls Names of Australian Aboriginal Origin

19 Sunday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Themes and Lists

≈ 52 Comments

Tags

Australian Aboriginal names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, locational names, name history, name meaning

It is not difficult to find little lists of Aboriginal words that can be used as personal names, accompanied by their purported meanings; what is harder is to ascertain their origins. Even reliable baby name books are content to say that such-and-such a name comes from “an Aboriginal language”, without specifying which one. Often it seems that no-one knows: as languages became extinct, certain words and phrases were recorded for posterity, without any knowledge of which peoples the words were spoken by, and perhaps even without an understanding that there were different Indigenous peoples.

Historian Watkin Tench, a British officer who arrived on the First Fleet, noted that many Aboriginal names and words sounded pleasing and even familiar to the ears of English speakers, and recorded that the chaplain’s wife was so taken with the name of an Aboriginal woman she met named Milba that she christened her own baby, born in the new colony, Milba Maria Johnson.

It’s therefore not a new phenomenon for non-indigenous people to use words from Aboriginal languages as personal names, although some people may find the idea inappropriate or disrespectful. I’ve chosen names very conservatively, tending to pick out ones that are already in common use as personal names, as place names, or as business and organisation names.

You should also be aware that a word from one language may mean something completely different in another part of the country, so you may believe your child’s name means “desert flower”, but someone who speaks a different language may tell you that it means “swamp” or “elbow”. Hopefully it won’t be anything worse than those.

Names from Aboriginal languages tend to be easy for us to spell and pronounce. Because Aboriginal languages were not written down, they are now spelled exactly as they sound. The emphasis is placed very much as it is in familiar names, so that Kalinda is kuh-LIN-da, just like Amanda or Samantha. That could very well be due to European influence; I’m not sure.

This is my first Name List done under my resolution to rely on failed Google searches for blog entry ideas. “Aboriginal baby names” has been Googled many times to get to my blog, but I never felt that I knew enough about the subject to devote a blog entry to it. I still don’t know enough, but I now realise that waiting until I do know enough may mean never doing it at all.

Allira

This name is a corruption of the word allirea meaning “clear crystal quartz” and comes from the languages from around the Melbourne area of Victoria. There are extensive quartz supplies in the area around Melbourne, and Aborigines would have mined them for spear and knife edges. Quartz crystal was also used in rain-making ceremonies, and was both practical and spiritual in nature. However, in the language of the Arrernte people from Alice Springs, Allira means “niece”, and there is a character from legend with this name. Allira is not infrequently used as a brand name, which may be one reason why so many spelling variants exist for it: Alira, Allyra, Aleera, Aleerah, and so on. Another is probably to make the pronunciation clearer – uh-LEER-uh. Allira is commonly used as a girl’s name in Australia. Prominent people called Allira include glamour model Allira Cohrs, and surf Ironwoman Allira Richardson.

Bindi

Bindi is said to mean “little girl” in an Aboriginal dialect, and that is how it seems to be understood by Indigenous people, although I cannot discover what dialect it is from. Famous people with the name include Bindi Irwin, the daughter of conservationist Steve Irwin, and Aboriginal artist Bindi Cole. In the Nyungar language from the area around Perth in Western Australia, bindi bindi means “butterfly”, and I can imagine using just one of the bindis to make a name. There was a West Australian Aboriginal activist in the early twentieth century called Daisy Bindi, and her surname was taken from a nickname given to her by her husband. Something that usually crops up in relation to this name is that bindi, or bindii, is also the name of different types of noxious weed. These have nasty prickles that get stuck in your feet, and I presume it means “horrible spiky things” in some Indigenous language. These are an introduced species though, so the name of the plant only dates to the mid 19th century. Bindi isn’t an unusual name for girls to have in Australia.

Lowanna

In the Gumbaynggir language from mid-north New South Wales, this means “girl”. There is a village near Coffs Harbour called Lowanna. In one of the dialects from Tasmania, it meant “woman”. I have seen Indigenous people translate it as “beauty” or “beautiful woman”, but do not know which languages they are drawing upon. There was a school story for girls from the 1920s about a rich, worldly girl called Lowanna Laurenson who ends up working in films in America, and this may have brought the name to people’s attention. It’s a popular name for businesses and organisations, and is also a type of strawberry. A prominent person with this name is Lowanna Gibson, a figure skater from an Indigenous background, but I’ve seen quite a few Aboriginal girls and women with this name.

Kalinda

According to Australian Aboriginal Words and Place Names and Their Meanings by Sydney J. Endacott (1955), this word means, “See!”, as if someone is exclaiming at something they have espied and wish to draw other’s attention to it. Endacott’s little book is a pamphlet which lists all the words and their meanings, but doesn’t give any further information about them or their origins. Baby name books gloss it as “a lookout”, and some add with a touch of imagination, “a lookout over the sea”. It’s commonly used as a place name and organisation name, and is popular as a name for houses which have a nice view. A prominent person with this name is Kalinda Griffiths, who last year won the Northern Territory Young Australian of the Year Award. Kalinda is of part-Aboriginal heritage, and is carrying out research in Indigenous health. There’s also a left-wing writer called Kalinda Ashton.

Kirra

Kirra Beach is the name of a seaside suburb on the Gold Coast in Queensland, and kirra is said to mean either “leaf” or “boomerang” in a local language. According to The Australian Race by Edward M. Curr, kirra means “white cockatoo”; this is another book which gives lists of words and meanings, with no indication of which language or origin they are from. In the Murri language of southern Queensland, kirra means “to live”. This is a well used name in Australia, because it fits in so well with popular name such as Keira; Kirra-Lee is a common double name, and you can see how this fits in with Kirrily. Prominent people named Kirra include artist Kirra Jamison, and photographer Kirra Prendergast (both are from Byron Bay).

Maya

Maya (MY-uh) means “house, home” in the Jiwarli language of Western Australia’s Kimberley region. However, there are a number of similar words in other languages to denote some kind of hut or shelter, including maya or mia in Nyungar, and mya, mai, and mimi amongst the peoples of Victoria around Melbourne (often duplicated into maya-maya, mia-mia etc). It may help to explain why the names Maya and Mia are so popular in Australia – they have a native sound to our ears.

Merindah

This word means “beautiful”, and seems to be from one of the languages around the Sydney area, although I’m not sure which one. Apart from being used as a girl’s name, it is often used as a place name or name for businesses and houses as well. It sounds very similar to the name Miranda. It’s common to spell it Mirinda; however in the Kaurna language from the Adelaide area of South Australia, mirinda means “leech”. Prominent people named Merindah include Merindah Donnelly, who was nominated for NSW Young Australian of the Year for her work promoting social justice for Indigenous people, and photographer Merindah Bernoth.

Merri

Merri Creek is in southern Victoria and joins the Yarra River, which flows through the city of Melbourne. The point where the creek and river meet was traditionally an important meeting place for the Wurundjeri people, and it is thought to be where an important treaty between Indigenous Australians and Europeans took place. Unfortunately, this creek was very badly treated, and became heavily polluted, but efforts are now being made to turn things around, with some promising results. Its name comes from the local phrase merri merri, “very rocky”; the doubling of a word is usually an intensifier in Indigenous languages. Although the meaning is not particularly feminine, it sounds similar to the name Mary, and of course exactly like the English word merry. If you like the sound of Merry, but worry it seems too light and frivolous, Merri gives it a little more oomph. The pollution aspect I admit is not appealing, but things are changing, and it is a testament to the resilience of nature. Merri is a surprisingly tough little name.

Rianna

This means “small caterpillar” in a Tasmanian dialect. Caterpillars are important in the mythology of some Aboriginal cultures, because they are the precursor to the butterfly, which is seen as a soul of the departed. I haven’t been able to find out if they were especially important to the Tasmanians, but they may very well have been used as a food source. I haven’t seen anyone use Rianna in this way, but it seems to me an attractive name with a rather sweet meaning that isn’t too cutesy or pretty-pretty.

Tarni

Tarni-warra is an onomatopoeic word to describe the sound of the surf in the Kaurna language of South Australia. Tarni is therefore taken to mean “surf, wave, breaker”, and is often assumed to be one of the influences upon the name Tahnee. I can’t confirm that, but Tarni Warra is a common name for houses on or near the beach, and Tarni is used as a place and business name as well as a personal name. Prominent people named Tarni include ice hockey player Tarni Loreggian, and Tarni Carter who sings with rock band Radio Flyer, but it’s not difficult to find Australian women and girls with this name. It does not seem to be heavily used by Indigenous people.

Celebrity Baby News: Late Baby News

18 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, locational names, nicknames, unisex names

 

NRL player John Sutton, the co-captain of the South Sydney Rabbitohs, and his partner Stacey Shumack, welcomed a daughter named Pippi Rae 10 months ago.

Comedienne Sarah Kendall, and her fiancé, comedian Henry Naylor, welcomed a daughter named Viv 20 months ago. Sarah has been living and working in London for twelve years now, which I assume is why we have not heard of Viv’s birth until now. Sarah is currently visiting Australia to perform her show, Persona.

Henry Naylor is a Cambridge Footlights alumnus and one of its former Presidents. He is best known in the UK for his comedy partnership with Andy Parsons and their BBC radio show Parson’s and Naylor’s Pull-Out Sections. He has also written for several TV shows, including Dead Ringers.

Viv Naylor is named after her mother’s favourite fashion designer, Vivienne Westwood, the punk pioneer who set up shop in once-fashionable Chelsea, and her father’s favourite cricketer, Viv Richards, the scintillating former batsman for the West Indies side.

Saturday Celebrity Sibset: A Taste of Scotland – Leigh McClusky and Simon Haigh

18 Saturday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Sibsets in the News

≈ Comments Off on Saturday Celebrity Sibset: A Taste of Scotland – Leigh McClusky and Simon Haigh

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celebrity sibsets, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, food names, nature names, plant names, Scottish names, surname names, twin sets, unisex names

Last year we featured celebrity mum, Rosanna Mangiarelli, who took maternity leave from Channel 7’s current affairs show, Today Tonight, after the birth of her second daughter, Olivia.

The Today Tonight presenter that Rosanna took over from was Leigh McClusky, who was the show’s anchor from 1995 to 2007. She left when she became pregnant with twins, and later founded her own media and public relations firm in Adelaide. Leigh is currently the host of SA Life, a lifestyle show promoting South Australia. On her team of presenters is Michael Keelan, Grant Cameron, Briony Hume, Rosa Matto, and Pete Michell.

In 2000, Leigh married Simon Haigh, owner of Haigh’s Chocolates. This family-owned boutique chocolate business was started by Simon’s great-great grandfather, Alfred Ernest Haigh in 1915, and continued on by his son Claude. He left the business to John, Simon’s father, who trained in Switzerland, and now Simon and his brother Alister run the business together.

The family motto? “If you’re born a Haigh, you eat dark chocolate,” says Simon.

I’m so glad I am not writing this story at the age of six, for I would have cried with jealousy at children who had a dad with his own chocolate factory, and where you inherit a family tradition of eating dark chocolate.

Now grown-up, and unable even to finish my Valentine chocolates without generous assistance, I feel I can press on without too many tears.

The Haighs chocolate-inheriting children are:

Murdoch (born 2002)

Sigourney (born 2006)

Jock and Tansy (born December 2007, and 18 months younger than Sigourney)

The twins were born with the help of IVF, and according to Leigh, made their different personalities apparent even as new babies – Jock serious, Tansy laid-back.

There’s a Scottish theme going with the boy’s names, suitable for sons of someone named McClusky. Interestingly for the son of a journalist, Murdoch also has the name of a famous family of media magnates; most of us will have heard of Keith Rupert Murdoch, so often in the news recently because of his newspaper, The Sun. Leigh never seems to have worked for the Murdochs, so it may just be a coincidence. Jock seems to have been given the Scottish version of the popular boy’s name Jack.

Sigourney reminds us of American actress Sigourney Weaver. Ms Weaver’s real name was Susan, and she chose Sigourney as a stage name from an off-page character barely mentioned in F.Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Mrs Sigourney Howard, who is the aunt of the sporting Jordan Baker. It’s a surname occasionally used as a first name, often for males. Because of the actress and the classic novel, it seems very American, although Sigourney Weaver is of Scottish heritage too.

Tansy is the name of a bitter and toxic herb, considered useful in cooking, gardening and medicine for thousands of years. It has cheery yellow flowers, and is a good companion plant as it keeps away insects. A tansy is also a type of sweet omelette pudding, flavoured with the herb; British comedian Sue Perkins got slightly poisoned eating one on the entertaining Supersizers Go … series. The plant grows abundantly wild in Scotland.

(Both photos from the Herald Sun archives).

Celebrity Baby News: Casey and Adriana Stoner

17 Friday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

Motorcycle racing star Casey Stoner, and his wife Adriana, welcomed their first child yesterday. Their daughter Alessandra Maria was born late in the evening on February 16, weighing 2.8 kg (a bit over 6 pounds). Alessandra Stoner was born on the birthday of Italian multiple MotoGP champion, Valentino Rossi.

Casey learned to ride a motorcycle as a toddler, and has been competing since he was four years old. At the age of 14 he moved to England, because they allow professional competing two years younger than in Australia. He has won the MotoGP twice, including last year, and in the past six seasons, is the only rider to win more MotoGP races than seven-time champion Valentino Rossi, out-gunning the Italian great 33 wins to 26.

Adriana (nee Tuchyna) is from Adelaide and is the daughter of a motorcycle racer. She first met Casey in 2003, when she asked him to sign her stomach. They began a relationship two years later, after she had turned 16. Casey and Adriana were married in January 2007, and Casey has said publicly that marriage has made him calmer and a better racer. The Stoners are currently based in Switzerland.

Millicent and Archibald: Birth Announcements from the Melbourne “Age”

17 Friday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

Girls

Clara Matilde (Ewan)

Eleanor Rose (Sarah, Maeve)

Eve Margaret

Felicity Maree

Kira Louise Alexandra (Mitchell)

Lucy Angela (Oscar)

Millicent Diane (Charlotte, Lucy, Tom)

Nilaya Rose

Tobie Jesse (Reuben, Eamon)

Zahra Caroline

 

Boys

Angus McKenzie

Archibald William John “Archie” (Fergus)

Charles John Mackay

Jack Andrew John (Phoebe, Annabelle, Lucy, Sam, Rosie)

Jude Oliver

Luka James David

Ollie Edward (Oscar)

Quade Alfred Andrew (Baylie, Ryder)

Rex Augustus (Jude)

Sebastian Leo

Twins Gryffin and Nedrick: Birth Announcements from Melbourne’s “Herald Sun” (January)

17 Friday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Bailey James and Jack Steven

Eilidh Bella and Ella Melissa

Gryffin Maxwell and Nedrick Stanley

Jasmine Ivy and Luke Austin

Luke Harrison and Alexandra Grace

 

Girls

Abbie Scarlett (Adam)

Charlize Jane Annabel

Darcie Livia

Edie Joy

Elodie Grace

Imogen Willow

Indigo Raine (Beau)

Ingrid Elizabeth (Angus)

Ivy Maeve (Angus)

Lily Hope (Shelby, Mia)

Katherine Dorothea

Madeleine Vera (Charlotte)

Melinda Jo

Paige Amanda (Charli-May, Georgia)

Sharelle Aileen Sarah (Hayden)

Shylah Heidi (Giselle)

Sienna Andie (Lucas)

Talia Angel

Tayla Reid

Vienna Harper (Capri)

 

Boys

Atticus Quince Domenico

Axton Karver

Billy Joseph (Sonny)

Brodie John Thomas

Cadell Graham (Lorelai)

Deegan Shaun (Jett)

Finn Horatio (Darcy)

George Anthony Rodney

Jackson Mick

Jameson Daniel Patrick (Hamish)

Jensen Kaihautu

Joshua Peter Andrew (Jessica, Samantha, Thomas)

Maverick James Daniel (Flynn)

Oscar Martin Peter (Stella, Archie)

Owen Russell Michael

Quillan Jeffrey (Joshua)

Quinn Jensen

Reve Robert John

Spencer William Kevin (Tahlia, Addison)

Zac Alfred Paul

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