• About
  • Best Baby Names
  • Celebrity Baby Names
  • Celebrity Baby Names – Current
  • Celebrity Baby Names – Past
  • Featured Boys Names
  • Featured Girls Names
  • Featured Unisex Names
  • Links to Name Data
  • Waltzing on the Web

Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Monthly Archives: September 2012

Celebrity Baby News: Ada Nicodemou and Chrys Xipolitas

06 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names

Actress Ada Nicodemou, and her husband Chrys Xipolitas, welcomed their first child on August 22, and have named their son Johnas Chrys. Johnas Xipolitas weighed 3.5 kg (7 lb 7 oz). Ada and Chrys have spoken openly about using IVF, and felt very fortunate to conceive on their first round.

Ada is originally from Cyprus, and moved to Australia as a child. She has appeared on television since she was a teenager, in the multicultural school drama, Heartbreak High, where she played aspiring dancer Katerina Ioannou. Since 2000, she has played Leah Patterson-Baker, making her one of the soap’s longest-serving cast members. Her character Leah is a big-hearted, hard-working single mother who runs a cafe and is very unlucky in love, with one of her husbands ending up in witness protection and the other killed in a freak abseiling accident. As her cafe was destroyed in a fire during a race riot, sending her into a spiral of depression, she can’t be said to be lucky in business either. This year Ada became the host of reality TV dating show, Please Marry My Boy, where contestants must move in with their potential husband’s mother, and mum makes the final choice. She has appeared in two films, including The Matrix, where she played Dujour, the “White Rabbit” girl.

Chrys is a chef with more than twenty years experience, and runs a Mediterranean restaurant in Sydney called Island. Ada and Chrys were married in 2007.

(Full story in this week’s New Idea)

Famous Name: Sapphire

05 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, english names, gemstone names, Greek names, historical records, name history, name meaning, name popularity, nature names, nicknames, opinions on names, popular culture, popular names, rare names, stripper names

The Australian movie The Sapphires was released here on August 9, after making it’s premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in May, where it received a resounding ten-minute standing ovation. The film is set in 1968, and the plot involves four sisters from a remote Aboriginal mission who are given the opportunity to go to Vietnam as entertainers to the troops – billed as The Sapphires. It’s based on a true story, with the screenwriter’s mum and auntie serving as the inspiration, as they performed as part of a quartet during the war. The “original Sapphires” are thrilled by the film’s portrayal of them, and the movie is making the Indigenous community they work in proud of their achievements.

The Sapphires has received mostly warm reviews from critics, and became the highest-earning Australian film on its opening weekend. I can see why it’s winning the hearts of audiences, because it’s charmingly unpolished, and is one of those feel-good movies where you end up laughing, crying, singing and tapping your feet. Serious topics such as racial prejudice are touched on (in fact are essential to the plot), but they don’t overshadow what is basically a light-hearted comedy-drama. Chris O’Dowd is hilarious, Jessica Mauboy’s singing fantastic, and Deborah Mailman is, as always, luminously charismatic.

If you are a fan of these warm-hearted underdogs-put-on-a-show stories and also love soul music, I urge you to check this movie out when it comes to your own part of the world. It’s being compared to Dreamgirls, but I can’t actually see they have much in common – the movie is probably closer to The Commitments. Of course what I spent most of the movie doing (in between laughing, crying, singing, tapping my feet, and trying to make sure no major popcorn disasters took place) was wondering how Sapphire could work as a name.

The name Sapphire is after the gemstone, which comes from the Greek meaning “blue stone”. However, the Greeks were most likely referring to lapis lazuli. Sapphires can actually come in a range of colours, but never red – red sapphires are called rubies.

In ancient Persia, sapphires were said to be a manifestation of heaven, and there is a tradition that the original Ten Commandments given to Moses by God were written on sapphire (although the Bible itself merely says that God could be seen standing on something that looked like a pavement of “clear sapphire”). In the Middle Ages, sapphires were said to have healing properties, and they have long been popular as royal jewels. Sapphires are favourites amongst the British royal family for their personal jewellery, as well as the Crown Jewels; Princess Anne and Princess Diana both had sapphire engagement rings, and Diana’s was inherited by Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge.

Sapphires have been mined in Australia for over a century, and commercially for more than fifty years. Australia was once the leading source of gem-quality sapphires, but we were overtaken by Madagascar; even today, many sapphires sold as coming from Asia are actually from Australia. Many Australian sapphire mines are in central Queensland, and indeed there is a mining town in that state named Sapphire, although the best are said to be found in the New England region of New South Wales. You can also have a go fossicking for your own sapphires – in New South Wales, you don’t even need a license to do so.

Sapphire has been used as an uncommon personal name for centuries, and got a boost in popularity around the early twentieth century, when other gemstone names such as Ruby and Emerald became fashionable. Not surprisingly, records show that most Australians named Sapphire came from New England or central Queensland, so here it seems to have local significance connected to the mining trade.

If you look online for opinions on the name Sapphire, you are almost certain to find the phrase “stripper name” attached to it. Granted, there are strippers with the stage name Sapphire – then again, there are strippers named Ruby, Lola, Angie, Madison, Abby, Victoria, Lucy, Alicia, Katie, Sarah, Rebecca, Elizabeth and basically any vaguely “girly” contemporary name you can think of. There are strippers using my own name, and nobody has ever assumed I simply must be a stripper with a sexy name like Anna, or shoved money down my bra and asked me to dance around a pole.

In fact, when Ruby became fashionable a few years ago, some of the most common complaints about it was that it sounded “trashy”, “stripperish”, and “too sexy”. Well, guess what? Ruby is now one of the most popular name for girls, being in the Top 10 of every state, and #1 in several states; it’s also been used as a baby name by several celebrities. It seems more like a cute little girl name that a sexy one, and the chances of all those thousands of young Rubys growing up to become strippers is statistically improbable.

If you love Ruby, but worry it’s too popular, you might might want to consider this beautiful gemstone name. Whether you have an attachment to Indigenous culture, Australian film, soul music, the gemstone trade, fossicking, sapphire mining areas, the Sapphire Coast in southern New South Wales, or simply love these deep blue jewels, Sapphire makes a lovely and unusual choice. Some may like Saffy as a nickname.

NOTE: Information on stripper’s names from Australian businesses online.

Names Spotted at Home and Abroad (Winter Edition)

04 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Names Spotted at Home and Abroad

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

aristocratic names, Armenian names, band names, cartoon names, created names, english names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, Fijian names, French names, Greek names, hebrew names, honouring, Indian namaes, Japanese names, Latin names, locational name, middle names, modern names, mythological names, name history, name meaning, nicknames, Norman names, Norman-French names, polynesian names, popular culture, saints names, Sanskrit names, sibsets, Spanish names, stage names, surname names, Tibetan names

International Names

Kalden Edwards (Qld) – son of Korinna and Doug, brother of Indigo. Kalden is a traditional Tibetan name meaning “from the Golden Age”, and there are several men of this name from Tibetan history.

Savvas Stergos (NT) – son of Afrodite, brother to Maria, Irene and Michael. The Greek name Savvas is from the Hebrew for “old man” (I’m guessing intended as a title of respect), and there are several saints bearing this name.

Vaishvi Jani (NSW) – daughter of Monalisa. Vaishvi is an Indian name connected to the worship of the goddess Parvati and the god Vishnu. Interestingly, we had a baby called Monalisa mentioned this year, and now we have an adult one.

Xevi Campisi (Qld) – son of Rene Flanagan and Zac Campisi. His name is a common Spanish pet form of Xavier.

Surnames as-First Names

Abbeney Manning (Qld) – daughter of Luise. As far as I know, this aristocratic Norman surname is another form of Albany, based on French place names such as Aubigne, meaning “Albinius’ town”, with the Latin name Albinius meaning “white”. It was used by sci-fi writer Ursula Le Guin as a place name in her fictional universe depicted in The Hainish Cycle. Although historically more often male, today it does sound like an ornate version of Abby.

Kasabian Sentance (NSW) – son of Jodi. Kasabian are a British rock band; the band’s name is from Linda Kasabian, a member of the Charles Manson cult, famous as his getaway driver. She did not participate in any violence, was the star witness for the prosecution, and expressed great remorse for her part in the group’s crimes. Her married surname is a common Armenian one, meaning, “butcher”.

Vaokakala Nevaeh Mara Tere-Vave (NSW) – daughter of Glory Mara Tere and Tevita Vave. Her name is a Fijian surname, but I don’t know what it means. I had never seen Nevaeh on a real person before, but wasn’t surprised to see it used in the Pacific Islander community, as not only does it have strong Christian associations, but the pronunciation (nuh-VAY-uh) is vaguely Polynesian-sounding.

Wiley Huber (NSW) – son of Nicole and Tim. This English surname is from a common place name meaning “willow wood”. It’s the stage name of English rapper Richard Cowie; he took it from a cartoon character named Wiley Kat. It reminds me of the cartoon critter Wile E. Coyote.

Middle Names

I saw a number of babies with intriguing middle names in the papers over the winter.

Archie Elvis Lincard (Qld) – son of Gemma Hall and Chris Lincard.

Austin Kelly Beadle (Qld) – son of Leah and David. Austin’s middle name is in honour of his aunt – one of the handy things about unisex names is their versatility. His first name is after his American-born father’s cousin.

Jake Tiger Gow (Qld) – son of Wendi Leggatt and Bede Gow.

Lily Pepper Van Veen (NSW) – daughter of Xan and Adam [pictured]

Sabine Mirah Thiedeman (Qld) – daughter of Leanne and Nick. Her middle name is a form of the Arabic Amira, meaning “princess, female ruler”.

Adult Names

There was a story in the paper about a construction worker who was awarded more than $100 000 damages named Ark Tribe. His lawyer was named Stephen Dolphin.

The family has rebelled against the slightly brain-sapping entertainment of The Price is Right, and have opted for a noisy educational TV show before dinner instead. I think they became suspicious I had it on to do some clandestine name-spotting (I blame educational shows for making them brainy enough to figure this out!).

So no more names from TPIR – the only one I can remember is a forty-ish lady named Blondie who was indeed blonde-ish. Was this her legal name, or a nickname? I have no idea, as the host did not ask her. It seemed a bit of an odd name to give a child (it reminds me of Blondie Bumstead from the newspaper cartoons). On the other hand, it seemed a slightly odd nickname to retain into middle age as well (although Mrs Bumstead managed to pull it off, at least).

Names Seen in Real Life

We went to the speedway a few times over the winter – my fashion tip is to wear every jumper, jacket and coat you possess, and then cover yourself in gloves, hats and scarves until no skin is in contact with the icy air.

The speedway is the place to go if you want to hear some hardcore-type boys names – over the winter, I heard the names Ajax, Axel, Blade, Cruz, Diesel, Harlem, Hendrix, Hunter, Jagger, Jett, Nash, Taj, Tosh and Zayd. I remember someone saying on Twitter that you mostly hear boy’s names in public places, as they are the ones getting called or yelled at by anxious or petulant mamas, and it’s so true. The only girl I can remember getting yelled at the same place was a non-harmonious Harmony.

Two tots entered in a local kids photo contest were called Sai (boy) and Leto (girl). Sai is a Japanese name that can be translated as “genius”, and Leto was the mother of Apollo and Artemis in Greek mythology. Her name may mean “the hidden one”, or more prosaically, “woman, wife”.

Names of Babies Born to People I Know or Know Of:

Girls: Aoife, Beatrix, Cynthia, Jemima, Tallulah

Boys: Julian and Miles (twins), Emmett, Ronan

Sad Celebrity Baby News: Kylie Kwong and Nell

03 Monday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Sad Celebrity Baby News: Kylie Kwong and Nell

Tags

celebrity baby names

Restaurateur and popular TV chef Kylie Kwong has spoken publicly for the first about the grief of losing her first child earlier this year. Named Lucky, the baby boy was due to be born last month, but the pregnancy, to Kylie’s partner, an artist known only as Nell, resulted in a premature stillbirth in early April.

Kylie and Nell have been together for five years, and were devastated at the loss of their son. Both of them are practising Buddhists, and have needed all their strength to remain positive.

I’m sure Kylie’s many fans will be saddened to hear of the loss she and Nell have experienced, and will send them their sympathies, if only in thought.

Odd Google Searches: Quirky, Quizzical and Quixotic Questions Sent to the Blog

02 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Your Questions Answered

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

African names, Google, Google searches, name meaning, nicknames, pet names, popular names, Thai names, twinsets

As a special treat, here is a selection of some of the more curious, cuckoo and cryptic search terms used to reach my blog. Despite the category this is in, most people did not get their question answered. Happy Father’s Day, and welcome to Google’s rich tapestry of wackiness.

Where can I find hiking map of Appellation Mountains?

The fact you can’t spell the name of the place you are hiking around concerns me. I don’t know why. It just does.

How many names are Lucy in the world?

Just one – Lucy.

What does the nickname Coco mean in the spiritual realm?

This was the most clearly written yet enigmatic query I received. Despite understanding every individual word perfectly, somehow this sentence makes no sense to me.

Why did they call it the First Fleet?

It was the first fleet of ships to arrive. Confusing, I know.

How much names are there?

Big lots.

Every nickname in Thailand

I couldn’t even tell you every nickname in Australia.

Ella and Ethan start with the same letter

Well spotted.

The meaning of the name Bluebell

It means “bluebell”.

I want a website with meanings for boys names only and I’m in a hurry

Go to babyboynamesonly.com, and then scroll through the menu on the left hand side to select the “Express Lane” option.

How did I get pregnant with twins?

My guess would be some form of sexual intercourse.

I have sex with girl only one time will she get pregnant I am Tamil?

Anyone know the Tamil for You’re having twins?

What was American culture like in the 2000s?

It only finished two years ago – can’t you still remember?

Top 19 girls names

I apologise for wasting your time with anything as hopelessly antiquated as the Top 20. However, could you not just put your finger over the last line?

Link and Zelda – good names for twins?

Please don’t.

The date of Jewish Easter

It’s the same day as Hindu Hanukkah and Scientologist Kwanza.

Hairy men in Mary, Christmas?

No question has perplexed me more than this one. I have absolutely no idea what they’re on about.

Tell me if Katie Virginia Mason is at her house can you show me her playing with Maddie her moms name is Lisa and her dad name Don she is a first grader

You’re scaring me.

Real Phoenix bird found

No it wasn’t.

Six girls and a rocket

Sounds like an awfully exciting adventure.

Are African boys named Bonny Basil?
Not all of them, or it would get too confusing.

How to encourage people to buy your teddy bear?

Only a monster would ever sell their teddy bear – a teddy is for life, not for eBay!

A picture of God in 1900

I think He looked the same then as He does now.

Pics of babies and children with a white mum and a dad who has Irish, Maori, Red Indian [sic] and Jamaican heritage

No way could you get all that information just from someone’s picture.

Should I call my pet turtle Sally?

Aww, that would be such a cute turtle name.

Celebrity Baby News: Football Babies

01 Saturday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: Football Babies

Tags

celebrity baby names

Australian rules footballer Ryan Ferguson, and his wife Bree, welcomed their son Logan on the first weekend of the season, which was in late March. Since his birth, Logan has attended almost every game. Ryan is the captain of West Adelaide Bloods, in the SANFL.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

NRL footballer Jono Wright and his wife welcomed their son Layken on August 29. Jono is the winger for the Canterbury Bulldogs, who are the minor premiers for 2012.

(Photo shows Ryan and Bree with baby Logan)

Can You Suggest Any Names Similar to These?

01 Saturday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Naming Assistance

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Australian Aboriginal names, celebrity baby names, choosing baby names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, Gone With The Wind, Hollywood names, modern names, name meaning, name popularity, name substitutes, nme combinations, popular names, sibsets, surname names, US name popularity

Jools and her husband are expecting a baby in a few weeks, and have elected not to find out the sex in advance. If the baby is a boy they are all set, having easily decided on a name. However, girls’ names seem a bit trickier. Jools would like something that isn’t too popular, but isn’t too different either.

Their list so far is:

  • Sc@rlett Elle
  • H@rlow Eve
  • Mill@ Rose

Jools and her husband already have a little boy named J@sper (he has a modern middle name that makes his name seem quite “cowboy cool”), and their surname starts with F and ends in N.

Jools would like to know what people think of the names they have come up with so far, and if there are any names similar to these that they might prefer.

~~~~~~~~~~

I think the names you’ve already picked are perfectly fine – they’re pretty, fashionable, modern names that are familiar to everyone from their Hollywood associations, but none of them are crazy popular as yet. They all seem okay with your surname, and I can imagine them as sisters to your son.

To me, Scarlett sounds best with your surname and the best match with J@sper, although for some reason Sc@rlett Elle doesn’t quite gel as a name combination – the two names seem to run into each other a little too much, maybe. I’d probably prefer the middle name to start with a consonant, such as May or Louise (just as examples). To me that sounds a bit crisper and more defined.

Milla is a lovely name, and the name combination you’ve chosen very attractive. However, if you were concerned about popularity, then Harlow is the least common of the names – although I’m pretty sure it’s scorching up the charts, and will be in the Top 100 within a few years.

Basically you could go with whichever of these you like best, but the fact you’re still looking for names suggests that you are not completely satisfied with any of them. You’ve still got a few weeks, so consider a wide range of names and step outside your comfort zone a bit. Then, if you don’t like any of them, you can go back to your original list with more confidence.

Here’s a few names to think about:

If you like Scarlett, you may like:

  • Bonnie – this is another name from Gone with the Wind; Bonnie was Scarlett and Rhett’s daughter. I think it sounds sweet and pretty, yet not frilly or sugary. It’s never been in the Top 100, but I think it will be there in a year or three.
  • Russet – it’s another surname that means “red”, and has the same T-ending as Scarlett, but it’s very rare and much more daring.
  • Sadie – to me this sounds like another “Southern belle” type name; it’s getting quite hip, but still isn’t popular at all. Like Scarlett was around 15 years ago.

If you like Harlow you may like:

  • Cleo – similar sound and references another famous woman known for her beauty. Like Harlow, it’s getting very fashionable, but not popular yet.
  • Meadow – this is another American-style name which is very underused in Australia. It may seem slightly out-there. Just like Harlow did a few years back.
  • Marlowe – this is the name of Sienna Miller’s new daughter, and it’s bound to become a “hot” name – just like Harlow did after Nicole Richie and Joel Madden chose it for their daughter.

If you like Milla you might like:

  • Millie – I really love this one as a match with your son’s name. It’s a cute name, and others must agree, as it climbed 90 places last year.
  • Milea – pronounced mi-LAY-uh, this name sounds European and sophisticated, just like Milla. Its origins are equally ambiguous.
  • Willa – a fashionable celebrity baby name just starting to chart in the US. It has an Aussie connection, because willa is an Aboriginal word for “woman”.

Wild Card Suggestions

  • Airlie
  • Avalon
  • Blythe
  • Charlize
  • Coco
  • Mika
  • Milana
  • Monroe
  • Tempest
  • Willow

Readers, which name do you like best that would fit with Jools’ requirements? And can you think of any other names in a similar style she might like?

NOTE: The baby’s name was Milla Harlow!

 

 

Newer posts →

Enter your email address to follow this blog

Categories

Archives

Recent Comments

A.O.'s avatarwaltzingmorethanmati… on Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang…
Madelyn's avatarMadelyn on Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang…
JD's avatardrperegrine on Can Phoebe Complete This …
A.O.'s avatarwaltzingmorethanmati… on Rua and Rhoa
redrover23's avatarredrover23 on Rua and Rhoa

Blogroll

  • Appellation Mountain
  • Baby Name Pondering
  • Babynamelover's Blog
  • British Baby Names
  • Clare's Name News
  • For Real Baby Names
  • Geek Baby Names
  • Name Candy
  • Nameberry
  • Nancy's Baby Names
  • Ren's Baby Name Blog
  • Sancta Nomina
  • Swistle: Baby Names
  • The Art of Naming
  • The Baby Name Wizard
  • The Beauty of Names
  • Tulip By Any Name

RSS Feed

  • RSS - Posts

RSS Posts

  • Celebrity Baby News: Melanie Vallejo and Matt Kingston
  • Names from the TV Show “Cleverman”
  • Can Phoebe Complete This Sibset?
  • Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang Winter
  • Baby, How Did You Get That Name?
  • Celebrity Baby News: Media Babies
  • Celebrity Baby News: Adelaide Crows Babies
  • Celebrity Baby News: Chris and Rebecca Judd
  • Names at Work: Name News From the World of Business and Employment
  • Celebrity Baby News: Sporting Round Up

Currently Popular

  • The Top 100 Names of the 1930s in New South Wales
  • Celebrity Baby News: Cathy Freeman and James Murch
  • Rare Girls Names From the 1940s
  • Celebrity Baby News: Ross Stevenson and Sarah Fallshaw
  • Celebrity Baby News: Victoria Samba and Mitch Hoare

Tags

celebrity baby names celebrity sibsets english names famous namesakes fictional namesakes honouring locational names middle names name combinations name history name meaning name popularity name trends nicknames popular names saints names sibsets surname names twin sets unisex names

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Waltzing More Than Matilda
    • Join 517 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Waltzing More Than Matilda
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...