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Monthly Archives: November 2012

Celebrity Baby News: Alex O’Loughlin and Malia Jones

12 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Actor Alex O’Loughlin, and his partner Malia Jones, welcomed their son about three weeks ago, and recently announced his name as Lion. Although Lion is their first child together, both parents have children from previous relationships – Alex has a teenage son named Saxon, and Malia has a son named Spike, aged 3. Spike is the son of Australian surfer Luke Stedman.

A NIDA graduate, Alex has appeared in several Australian drama series, including White Collar Blue, and in a few Australian films. He moved to Hollywood to futher his career, and joined the cast of police drama The Shield in 2007. He left when he was offered the lead role in the vampire-detective TV series, Moonlight, and then later starred in short-lived hospital drama, Three Rivers. Since 2010 he has played the lead role in successful remake Hawaii Five-0; he’s also played opposite Jennifer Lopez in a romantic comedy, and tested for James Bond.

Malia is a surfer and swimsuit model who designs swimwear for Mambo sportswear. She and Alex met through a mutual friend in Honolulu, where Hawaii Five-0 is filmed.

Team Pink, Team Blue, or Team Lavender?

11 Sunday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Your Questions Answered

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

dog names, english names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, French names, Gaelic names, locational names, mythological names, name meaning, name popularity, names for budgies, nature names, nicknames, popular culture, popular names, Sanskrit names, surname names, unisex names, US name popularity, vocabulary names

I wasn’t going to do another one of these, but it turned out the list of questions on unisex names could almost be eliminated if I did just one more, so I couldn’t resist doing an end-of-year clean up.

Some names are easy for most of us to assign to Team Pink or Team Blue – for example, a straw poll would probably show strong support for Amelia as a girl’s name, and Archibald as a more masculine moniker. But there are quite a few others that we have to think about a bit more, and some seem to be both feminine and masculine in such equal measure that we could probably call them Team Lavender.

Of course, for practical purposes, all names are unisex, so this is only designating them according to linguistic meaning, historical use, and current popularity.

I. ARE THESE GIRL NAMES?

Sydney as a girl’s name

Sydney is historically a unisex name in Australia, but hasn’t charted at all since the 1960s. I think it’s up for grabs by either gender, and is a definite member of Team Lavender.

Rory girl name popularity Australia

According to the data at hand, the popularity of Rory as a girl’s name in Australia is zero. It’s charted as a boy’s name since the 1940s and is currently #159; it’s never charted as a girl’s name. This makes it (for the purposes of this question) Team Blue.

Is Indiana a girl’s name? (multiple asks)

Yes, historically it is, for the first people named Indiana in the records are female. It’s only since the Indiana Jones movies that the name has widely been seen as potentially masculine – although the movie’s protagonist is named Dr Henry Walton Jones. From Utah rather than the state of Indiana, we learn in The Last Crusade that he took his nickname from the name of the family dog. I’m not sure whether the dog was male or female. Indiana has only ever charted as a girl’s name, and is currently #78 and climbing steeply. I call Team Pink.

Bodhi as a girl’s name

Bodhi is a Sanskrit word meaning “awakened”, referring to the enlightenment of the Buddha. As men and women are equally capable of spiritual enlightenment, I think this is for both boys and girls and can join Team Lavender.

Can Russell be a female name?

The surname Russell simply means “red” or “reddish”, and there’s nothing specifically masculine about it. However, Russell has a reasonable history of acceptance as a male name. Currently it doesn’t chart for either gender, and I think it could be used for a girl’s name. You could also use the vocabulary word Rustle. Maybe a Deep Indigo?

Is Campbell a girl name?

In Australia it is accepted as a male name, and has charted for boys since the 1950s, being now at #384. In the US it is more common as a female name. The surname means “crooked mouth”, which doesn’t sound at all pretty to me, but isn’t technically masculine. In Australia, I think it’s still Team Blue.

II: ARE THESE BOY NAMES?

Marlo as a boy’s name

Marlo Hoogstraten is a Dutch-born Australian DJ; he works under the name MaRLo. Marlo Stanfield is a character in the TV show, The Wire, who is head of his own drug crew. There seem to be more references to Marlo as a male name than a female one. This may be a pale Blue-Toned Lavender.

Is Riley a boy’s name in Australia?

Yes, it’s charted as a male name only since the 1970s, and is currently #20. Team Blue.

Can Autumn be a boy’s name?

There’s no reason why not, except that it is widely accepted as a female name. In Australia, Autumn is a fairly rare name for either sex, so it might be easier to be a boy named Autumn here than elsewhere. It would be unusual though. A very pale Pink-Toned Lavender.

Boys name Kirra

The town in Queensland is nearly always given as a female name in Australia. Besides sounding similar to girl’s names Keira and Kira, part of the reason may be because in Greek mythology, there are a couple of nymphs named Kirra, giving it a distinctly feminine vibe. I’m assigning this one to Team Pink.

Tahgan boys name

I only know of Taghan as a place name in the Middle East, which sounds unisex to me. It looks similar to boy’s name Teagan and girl’s name Tegan, so I’m calling this for Team Lavender.

Bay as a boy’s name

Although this nature name could be either male or female, in practice I’ve only seen this given to boys in Australia – maybe because it sounds like it could be short for Bailey. I guess it could be seen as Blue-Toned Lavender.

III: ARE THESE BOY OR GIRL NAMES?

Is Lyndall male or female?

Historically, it’s a girl’s name. Lyndall charted as a female name only from the 1930s to the 1990s. It currently doesn’t chart for either sex. Pink, or at least Pinkish.

Jordan – boys name or girls name?

Jordan has charted as a boy’s name since the 1960s, peaked in the 1990s at #23, and is currently #63. It has charted as a girl’s name since the 1980s, peaked in the 1990s at #85, and is currently #389. So it’s both a boy’s name and a girl’s name, but more boyish, since it’s been used longer as a boy’s name, hit a higher peak as a boy’s name, and is still Top 100 for boys. Deep Blue-Toned Lavender.

Is Jagger more a boy or girl name?

I’d say it’s more of a boy name, just by usage. I have seen people use Jagga or Jaggah for girls though. Blue, at present.

Kayley “unisex name”?

I think technically Kayley is two separate names, one unisex or male, and the other one female. The surname Kayley can be from several origins, and if English or  French, it refers to place names (unisex). On the other hand, if Gaelic, it means “son of Caollaidhe” (male). It’s been overwhelmingly used as a girl’s name though, probably with the idea it’s an elaboration of Kay, a pet form of Katherine. There have been a very few men named Kayley. Confusingly, I think this is Pink, Blue and Lavender all at the same time.

IV: ADVICE NEEDED

What boy’s name can Gigi be short for?

There’s a few choices. According to Wikipedia, famous men using Gigi as their nickname have Luigi, Luigino, Gianluigi or George as their full name – although my own first thought was Giglio. Another possibility is that in the story Gigi, the protagonist’s full name was Gilberte, so maybe a boy called Gilbert could be a Gigi.

Will people automatically assume someone called Kelly is a girl?

I would probably assume an adult named Kelly to be a woman, but I could easily adjust if it turned out to be a man instead. For a new baby, I wouldn’t assume it was either a boy or girl.

Are guys put off by women with male names?

There are quite a few studies on what names men and women find sexy, but these name-image polls are useless in real life, when you are confronted with a living breathing human being. I don’t believe any man would turn down a beautiful woman because her name was John; conversely, no matter how alluring and feminine your name, if you look and smell like you’ve been living in a sewer, I don’t think you are going to be besieged by suitors. Just from my own observations, I’ve noticed a lot of guys say they are intrigued by girls who have unisex nicknames, like Jamie, Charlie or Teddie.

A good unisex name for a budgie

You could use a nickname that could be short for either a girl or boy name, such as Charlie, Joey or Sam, otherwise I think a nature name would be nice, such as Ash, Blueberry, Midnight, Sky, Sunny, or Snowflake. You could also use a cutesy sort of name such as Pippet, Peep, Peck, Pixel, Tweety, Chirp, Happy, or Fidget. Apparently budgies can’t say words with a hard G sound in them, so avoid Giggles, Goldy or anything like that if you’re hoping to teach it to talk.

Saturday Historical Sibsets: Sibsets from the Wells Family Tree

10 Saturday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Sibsets in the News

≈ Comments Off on Saturday Historical Sibsets: Sibsets from the Wells Family Tree

Tags

historical records, name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

A selection of sibsets from the family tree of Claris Wells. You can see the complete family tree here. Simply click through each page to see all nine generations.

EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

The Wells Family of Kent

Parents: Thomas and Alice Wells

  • Eliza
  • Ann
  • Thomas
  • Alice
  • Sarah
  • Mary
  • John
  • Jane
  • Susanna

NINETEENTH CENTURY

The Wells Family of Ide Hill, Kent

Parents: Joseph and Rebecca Wells

  • Charlotte
  • Jane
  • Joseph
  • John Thomas
  • William
  • George
  • Isaac
  • Alfred
  • Harriet Emily (Harriet’s mother-in-law was named Philadelphia)
  • Mary Ann

The Walter Family of New Zealand

Parents: Elizabeth and George Walter (m. 1821)

  • Harriet
  • Thomas
  • Elizabeth
  • Henry Shilock
  • Sarah
  • Mary
  • Avice

The Wickens Family of Kent

Parents: Elizabeth and Edward Wickens

  • Twins John Wells Barden and Mary Thorp Barden
  • Barden Edward George
  • James Morgan Barden
  • Charlotte Katherine Barden

The Walter Family of Tonbridge, Kent

Parents: Henry and Hester Walter (m. 1852)

  • Eleanor Avis
  • George

The Steed Family of Kent

Parents: Mary and Robert Steed (m. 1868)

  • William
  • Elizabeth
  • Mary
  • Minnie
  • Amy
  • Robert
  • Hester

The Wells Family of Surrey

Parents: George and Martha Wells (m. 1870)

  • Rosa
  • Lily

The Wells Family of Plumstead, Kent

Parents: Isaac and Sophia Wells (m. 1870)

  • Arthur Isaac
  • Florence Ellen
  • Elizabeth
  • William Walter

The Wells Family of Essex

Parents: Alfred and Eliza Wells (m. 1870)

  • Alfred Edward
  • Mary Ann
  • Charles
  • Beatrice Eliza

The Smith Family of Kent

Parents: Mary and Benjamin Smith (m. 1877)

  • Miriam Rebecca
  • Olive Annetta
  • Maurice Rudolph
  • Lillian Wells
  • Mabel Sylvia

The Earl Family of Kent

Parents: Jane and John Earl (m. 1884)

  • Twins Archibald and Reginald
  • Arthur
  • Percival
  • Frederick

The Ward Family of Kent

Parents: Harriett and Frederick Ward (m. 1886)

  • Alfred Herbert
  • Ellen Frances
  • Mary Charlotte
  • Harriet
  • Thomas James
  • Elizabeth Jane
  • Marjorie
  • Rose Emily
  • Walter Henry
  • Frederick George

The Wells Family of Canada

Parents: Henry John and Lavinia Rosetta Wells

  • Susan
  • Henry John
  • Rosie Marie
  • Margaret Jane

The Wells Family of Sussex

Parent: Susanna Wells

  • Gertrude Susanna
  • Cecil
  • Ethel
  • Lillie

TWENTIETH CENTURY

The Ward Family of Canada

Parents: Rosie Marie and Frederick George Ward

  • Ellen Frances
  • Lavinia
  • Frederick
  • Susan May
  • Elizabeth
  • Daisey

The Ward Family of Canada (2nd generation)

Parents: Susan and Frederick Ward

  • Emma
  • Doris
  • Joseph
  • Frank
  • Henry
  • Freda

The Johnson Family of Canada

Parents: Margaret and Joseph Johnson

  • George
  • Rosie
  • Thomas
  • Ernest
  • Florence
  • Elsie
  • Joseph
  • John

The Best Family of Australia

Parents: Sarah and Thomas Best (Sarah was a daughter of Claris Wells)

  • Elizabeth Sarah
  • Ivy May
  • Twins Gladys Maud and William Thomas
  • Daphne Margaret
  • Hazel Doreen
  • Pansy Myrtle

The Short Family of Australia

Parents: Sussannah and James Short (Sussannah was a daughter of Claris Wells)

  • Evelyn May
  • Roy James
  • Pearl Annie
  • Hazel Amy Maud
  • Keith Thomas
  • Myrtle Sarah
  • Harold George
  • Cecily Eton

The Gale Family of Australia

Parents: Ivy and Aubrey Gale (Ivy was a granddaughter of Claris Wells; Aubrey’s mother’s name was Mary Christmass)

  • May Doris
  • Leslie Thomas
  • Roma Joyce

The Douglas Family of Australia

Parents: Gladys and Roy Douglas (Gladys was a granddaughter of Claris Wells)

  • Phyllis Lorraine
  • Mervyn Laurence
  • Mavis Estelle
  • Neville Thomas
  • Robert John

The Best Family of Australia (2nd generation)

Parents: William and Constance Eveline Best (William was a grandson of Claris Wells)

  • Joan Patricia
  • Merylea May
  • Elaine Constance
  • Colin William
  • Raymond Thomas

The Wood Family of Australia

Parents: Hazel and Frank Wood (Hazel was a granddaughter of Claris Wells)

  • Raymond William
  • Barrington Duncan
  • Leslie George
  • Lillian May
  • Allen Burkinshaw
  • Kenneth Victor
  • Christine Frances

The Ward Family of Hampshire

Parents: Mark and Deborah Jane Ward (m. 1989)

  • Aaron Mark
  • Leah Jacqueline

(Picture is of the village of Leigh in Kent – the Wells family originated from this area; image from Old UK Photos)

Summer and Storm: Birth Announcements from Melbourne (October)

09 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Summer and Storm: Birth Announcements from Melbourne (October)

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

Twins

Analise Danee and Astyn Grace

Archer Thomas and Olivier Alexander

Elle Summer and Willow Harper (Jaden)

Lola Scarlet and Ruby Olivia (Matilda)

Paige Jennifer and Charlotte Elizabeth

 

Girls

Abbie Lee Edna

Aliena Vivienne (Ethan)

Bo Felicity

Caitlin Sanjana (Aidan)

Cerise McKenzie

Daisy Myfanwy

Edith Anne (Hugh)

Elia Gianna (James, Thomas, Alexandra)

Fairley Georgia (Harrison, Ewan, Riley)

Isobel Frances Daisy (Tom, Edie)

Jacquelin Michelle Victoria (Kyle, Mitchell)

Keeley Eilish (Darcy, Amelia)

Lisette Haydee

Maelise Margaret Anne

Margaret Pearl “Maggie” (William)

Milla London (Harper, Baxter)

Montana Domenica Salvina (Dakota)

Remy Elise

Stella Arsine (Alec)

Summer Jendy

 

Boys

Arthur Liam Edward

Bowie Jeffrey (Stevie)

Byron Thomas (Hadleigh)

Casey Patrick

Dominic Anwar Latif (Oliver, Patrick)

Eli Qvist (Xavier, Monet)

Finley Ian (Aidan)

Francis Rocky (Harvey)

Hudson Michael John

Jai Logan (Tyler)

Jeremiah Chayton (Ava)

Jude Murphy (Milla, Evie)

Lennox Murray

Lucas Andrew Graeme (Lyla)

Patrick James Fred

Rupert John Rex

Storm Garry (Mason, Cameron, Chanel, Armani)

Taeyung Morrell Amadeus (Haneul)

William Zev (James)

Zeke Reginald (Leo)

(Picture is from the Melbourne Marathon, held in October; photo from The Herald Sun)

Celebrity Baby News: Todd and Sally Lowrie

08 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

animal names, archaic English vocabulary words, celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, Scottish slang

NRL player Todd Lowrie, and his wife Sally, welcomed their daughter Lani Mae on October 2, shortly after Todd’s team, the Melbourne Storm, won the 2012 Premiership. Lani Lowrie joins big brother Sonny, aged 1. Sonny’s birth was announced on the blog last year.

Todd began his professional career in 2003, and signed with the Melbourne Storm in 2010. He will be going to the New Zealand Warriors for the 2013 and 2014 seasons. Todd’s dad Bert Lowrie is the team manager for the State of Origin NSW Blues.

An interesting point about Todd’s own name is that his first name, Todd, is from a medieval English word for “fox”, while his surname, Lowrie, is an old Scottish slang word for “fox”. In this story of The Marriage of Robin Redbreast, recited by the sister of Robert Burns, the name Tod Lowrie is used to mean “Mister Fox”.

Celebrity Baby News: Heather Garriock and Mat Louchart

08 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, Japanese names, virtue names, vocabulary names

Soccer player Heather Garriock, and her partner Mat Louchart, welcomed their first child last month, and have named their daughter Kaizen Rose. Kaizen Louchart’s birth was announced on Facebook.

Heather started out playing for Australian teams, before playing overseas for clubs in the United States and Denmark. In 2008, she was drafted into the prestigious Women’s Professional Soccer League in America, where she played for the Chicago Red Stars. On her return to Australia, she went back to Sydney FC. She has played for the women’s national team, the Matildas, since she was a teenager, and attended two Olympic Games with them. Heather runs the Macarthur Youth Football Academy in Camden.

Mat is originally from France, and he and Heather met in Abu Dhabi while she was playing in a tournament.

Kaizen is the Japanese word for “improvement, change for the better”. The word has entered the English language to refer to the Japanese philosophy of continuous small improvements in business processes in the workplace, and applied to almost any industry. The word is pronounced KY-zen, and makes for an interesting modern virtue name.

Celebrity Baby News: Collette Dinnigan and Bradley Cocks

08 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: Collette Dinnigan and Bradley Cocks

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring

Fashion designer Collette Dinnigan, and her husband Bradley Cocks, welcomed their son Hunter Desmond David on November 5. Desmond is the name of Collette’s father, while Bradley’s dad is named David. Hunter Cocks was born at the Mater Hospital in Sydney weighing 4 kg (around 9lb). Hunter joins big sister Estella, aged 8, the daughter of Collette’s former partner, television presenter Richard Wilkins.

Collette was born in South Africa and grew up in New Zealand. She opened her first store in Sydney in the 1990s, exporting her designs all over the world. She was the first Australian designer to launch a ready-to-wear collection in Paris, and her range is now stocked in her stores in Sydney, Melbourne and London, as well as in David Jones department stores and Target. Collette’s name was featured on the blog last year.

Bradley is originally from Canada, and is a self-described luxury travel entrepeneur who is passionate about the environment and surfing. He has written for magazines such as Vogue Italia and The Australian Financial Review. He and Collette were married last year in Italy.

Celebrity Baby News: Wes Carr and Charlotte Gregg

08 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, nicknames, unisex names

Singer Wes Carr, and his wife, actress Charlotte Gregg, welcomed their first child on November 5, and have named their son Willow Harrison. Willow Carr was born in Sydney at 11.49 pm, and weighed 4.2 kg (9lb 4oz).

Wes was already a professional musician with his first album just out when he won the sixth season of Australian Idol in 2008. Since then he has released another album, seen his first single, You, debut at #1, and announced his new independent music project, Buffalo.

Charlotte has appeared in many TV dramas, including Underbelly, Home and Away, Offspring and Lowdown. She met Wes at a barbecue in 2008, and the couple were married last April, honeymooning in Europe.

There’s been several celebrities this year who have used a unisex name for their son, even though it is popular for girls. This one comes with an inbuilt boyish nickname – Will.

Famous Name: Bede

07 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Anglo-Saxon names, Australian Dictionary of BIography, birth notices, english names, famous namesakes, historical records, name history, name meaning, name popularity, Old English names, popular names, royal names, saints names

On November 1, Corporal Daniel Keighran became the third Australian soldier serving in Afghanistan to receive the Victoria Cross, the highest military decoration awarded for bravery in Australia. Corporal Keighran is the first member of the Royal Australian Regiment, and the 99th Australian, to receive a VC, and did so with great modesty and humility. Daniel’s wife Kathryn had no idea of the courage her husband had displayed under fire in battle two years ago until she learned he was about to be decorated for it. The Victoria Cross was awarded in a ceremony at Government House in Canberra.

Watching this story on the news reminded me to look at the list of those Australians awarded the Victoria Cross in the past, as I wanted to cover the name of a World War I hero for Armistice Day, which is on Sunday. As I ran my eye down the list, one name stuck out because it has been in my Request file for ages, and I briefly covered it in my article at Nameberry a short time ago. So it was quite an easy choice for me to select Bede as this week’s Famous Name.

Corporal Thomas James Bede Kenny, always known as Bede, was born in Sydney in 1896. The son of a butcher, he had just begun training as a chemist’s assistant when he enlisted with the Australian Imperial Force in 1915. He initially served in Egypt, then was sent to northern France in 1916 to take part in the second phase of the battle of Pozières, in the battalion bombing platoon.

It was in the spring of 1917, as British and Australians captured the outpost villages of the Hindenberg Line, that he performed the acts of valour that were to earn him the Victoria Cross. In the attack on Hermies, his platoon came under heavy fire from a machine-gun post which caused severe casualties. Bede rushed at the enemy single-handed, hurling three bombs, the last of which knocked out the post. He then took the surviving Germans prisoner, his actions contributing significantly to the success of the operation.

Later he was injured in battle and invalided home to Australia, arriving in Sydney to a hero’s welcome a few weeks before the Armistice. He was offered the chance to join the military police, and rejected it immediately, as for some reason he had a great dislike of them.

In civilian life, he worked as a salesman, and was happily married; he is remembered as a popular man with many friends, and a fondness for innocent pranks. He was left partially deaf from the war, and also suffered the effects of trench foot throughout his life. The great tragedy of his life was the deaths of two of his three children, which he never recovered from.

Like Corporal Keighran, Corporal Kenny never talked about his wartime experiences, and the only sign that he was proud of his military service was that he always led the VC winners at the Sydney Anzac Day marches. He died in 1953, and by a cruel irony, his pallbearers were military policemen.

The most famous person with the name Bede is the 7th/8th century English saint, Venerable Bede. Although it is not certain, it is thought that his Anglo-Saxon name, Beda, is from the Old English word bēd, meaning “prayer”. If so, it’s possible that his parents chose a religious life for him from his birth. The name wasn’t a common one, but interestingly, one of the kings of Lindsey, in England’s north, was named Beda; as Venerable Bede was from this area, it’s tempting to wonder if he was named after an ancestor, or a famous local namesake.

Venerable Bede is most famous for his prolific writing career, eventually completing over sixty books, most of which have survived. He wrote on a wide variety of subjects, including science, history, grammar, hagiography and theology; his best known work is An Ecclesiastical History of the English People, which begins with Caesar’s invasion of Britain, and ends with Bede’s own times. His use of AD to refer to events after the birth of Christ helped it become standard. He was also a teacher, a music lover, and was said to be accomplished at singing and poetry recitation, even writing some poetry of his own.

Bede is the only Englishman to be declared a Doctor of the Church; he is also the only Englishman to be mentioned in Dante’s Paradiso, where he appears amongst the theologians and doctors of the church. He is regarded as a saint in both the Catholic and Anglican churches.

If you are thinking that Bede (pronounced BEED) sounds a lot like the word bead, you would be correct. That’s because the Old English word bede, meaning “prayer” is the source of the modern word bead – because beads are used as a means of keeping count of prayers, a practice in Christianity which dates to the 5th century (although prayer beads are ancient and used in many religions). Because of this, you will sometimes see the name Bede interpreted as “bead” or “prayer bead”.

Bede isn’t a common name in Australia; at the same time, it isn’t all that unusual either. There are plenty of Bedes in the records, and if you go to the Australian Dictionary of Biography, you will find quite a few famous Australians with Bede as part of their name. What you primarily notice is that these Bedes tend to be from Catholic backgrounds (and some High Anglicans), and that Bede is usually one of their middle names. It is also the name of Bede Durbidge, who won Surfer of the Year a few years ago, giving the name a more cool laidback image.

I can imagine some people thinking that Bede sounds weird and ungainly; something only a staunchly Catholic family would use; a name best suited to leaving in the middle position. Which sounds perfectly reasonable – except that less than half a century ago, there was another boy’s name that seemed weird and ungainly, was used almost exclusively by Catholics, and generally relegated to the middle position, usually after Francis.

That name was Xavier, which is now #22 and rising. Could Bede be the Xavier of the future?

It’s a very old name with a solid history of use in Australia, part of the Catholic tradition, and with spiritual associations. It’s short yet substantial, clunky yet surprisingly cool. It’s the name of our heroes, our leaders, our intellectuals, our athletes, our artists, our businessmen, and for many of us, our dads and uncles and grandfathers too.

Wherever it might be headed, I see this name often enough in birth notices to know that it is not going away, which gives me a strange feeling of comfort.

(Photo of the Victoria Cross from The Australian)

Celebrity Baby News: Jonathan and Kylie Brown

06 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

AFL star Jonathan Brown, and his wife Kylie, welcomed their son Jack William on November 4. Jack Brown joins big sister Olivia, aged 3.

Jonathan is the captain of the Brisbane Lions, and is considered one of the greatest players in the game. He has made the All-Australian team twice, won the Coleman Medal once, and the Merrett-Murray Medal three times. He is the son of Brian Brown, who played for Fitzroy, with Jonathan recruited under the father-son rule. He is the nephew of Noel Mugavin who played for Fitzroy, and of Billy Picken, who played for Collingwood; his cousin is Liam Picken who plays for the Western Bulldogs. He is a regular guest panellist on the AFL Footy Show.

Kylie (nee Adams) is a former model, and first met Jonathan during celebrations after a game. The couple were married in 2008, later honeymooning in the United States.

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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

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