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Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Yearly Archives: 2012

My Top Five Name Blog-Related Peeves

14 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Naming Issues

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Australian slang terms, Babynameobsessed, celebrity baby names, choosing character names, eBay, father-son rule, Google, name meanings, pet peeves, twinsets, Twitter, unisex names

This week was Pet Peeves Week (which I think only exists on the Internet), and several bloggers took the opportunity to get a few of life’s little annoyances off their chest, including Ebony at Babynameobsessed.

Many name bloggers say that they started out with some naming peeves, but that continual blogging about names tended to dilute or even reverse their irritation, leaving them with a great sense of well-being and peace. Maybe a couple of years ago they couldn’t stand matchy twin names, boyish names on girls, or attention-seeking celebrity baby names, but now they think Doris and Boris as twins is cool, Frederick is actually kind of spunky on a girl, and some minor celeb calling their kid Gusty Glock requires only an amused and tolerant chuckle in response.

To an extent I can relate, but to an even bigger extent I can’t, because while blogging about names may have finished off some of my pet peeves, it has given me a whole new bunch to get annoyed by. After some twenty months of blogging, I have got quite a few things that now grate on my nerves beyond all endurance. I’ve cut it down to only the top five though, in order not to grate on yours too much.

1. Reborners who call their reborn dolls “babies”

In case you don’t know, reborn dolls are baby dolls which are incredibly lifelike in appearance – so much so that they can be mistaken for an actual baby (and have been). Reborners are hobbyists who make and/or collect reborn dolls. I don’t any problems with reborn dolls, or those who make or own them. However, I do have a problem with calling them babies. Reborn dolls are not babies. They are dolls.

Each day I ask Google to trawl through the Internet for me and bring me information tagged with the word baby, and each day I get a stack of threads from reborn dolls forums or entries from reborning blogs.

People call other things their “baby”, and it doesn’t seem to bother me. If someone writes, I’ve been riding my baby all day, I somehow immediately understand they are referring to a motorcycle, and if someone says, My poor baby had to be locked outside, I get an automatic picture in my mind that it’s a dog they’re talking about. I skim past and go on to the next item.

But when I read, I sold my first baby on eBay!, My baby’s leg fell off and I can’t reattach it, or I just rooted my baby’s head (if not Australian, check slang guide as to why that’s so disturbing), I practically have a heart attack. Even knowing they mean a doll, I can’t stop the racing heartbeat, sweaty palms, nausea, and instinctive need to phone the police I’d feel if it was a real baby I was reading about.

I’ve asked Google to eliminate the words doll and reborn from the search, but of course, they don’t call their dolls “dolls”, they call them “babies”. Unless a baby poos, wees, needs to be fed, and wakes you up in the night, it’s not a baby, it’s a doll. Call it by its correct name.

2. Celebrity pregnancy stories in the media that go nowhere

When a story appears in the press announcing that a celebrity (or celebrity’s partner) is pregnant, I add them to my watchlist and ask Google to e-mail me when the baby is announced. Then months and months go by, and no baby story appears. Half the time I have to stalk them on Twitter to find out what the baby was called, and often I end up in a dead end.

I can’t see the point of teasing us with a celebrity pregnancy if we don’t get to find out if the baby is born and what its name is. I don’t know why they do this, but it’s very annoying. Follow through on celebrity pregnancies, newspapers!

3. The notion that baby names need to be short and simple, otherwise they will be too hard for children to spell when they reach school-age

This advice is constantly handed out, by parents on forums and even on professional baby name sites. It has to be the most depressing advice ever. Your poor baby isn’t even born yet, and already you are being told it will probably be too stupid to reach normal literacy levels by the age of five, and you’d better dumb its name right down.

I notice with further despondency that names for boys seem to be especially prone to this line of thought. Apparently girls can handle having a long name like Anastasia or Penelope, but a boy named Demetrius or Sebastian won’t be able to cope, and it’s better to call him something like Max or Liam.

We’re always being told that boys tend to lag behind girls in communications skills, and urged to make more effort to get our sons interested in reading and writing. Children tend to perform to expectation, and I can’t help but wonder if setting low goals for them while they’re still in the womb is the way to improve things.

Short names are great. Short names can be spunky and cool. If you choose a short, simple name for your baby, fantastic – as long as you do so because you love the name, and not because you think that’s all your idiot child can manage.

4. The father-son rule in Australian Rules Football

The AFL has a rule that the son of a senior player can be immediately recruited to the same club his father played for. The good news is that when a star player has a baby boy, it’s cause for enormous celebration and congratulations. The bad news is that when he has a baby girl, it is, at best, a big “meh”.

So often the names of footballer’s babies are not announced in the press, and when that happens, I know in my bones he had a daughter. Sadly, this always turns out to be true. If the media isn’t too interested, fans can be positively vicious to a newborn daughter of a man without sons.

Often the kindest comment you will read in fan forums is Better luck next time. I have read, not once or twice, but again and again, What a waste of good sperm, Throw it away and try again, If it has a [profane word for female genitalia] we don’t give a [profane], and the chilling, Maybe we can still breed from it.

I have found myself in tears of rage at these revolting comments; I can’t imagine what the parents’ reactions would be, and I hope they never read them. There may be many benefits to the father-son rule; frankly I don’t really care as the results of it are so sickening. Celebrating boys shouldn’t have to mean ignoring and denigrating girls.

5. Writers who pick bad names for their characters

Not everyone on a name website is looking for a name for their child – many are just interested in names and language in general, and there are lots of budding authors who want advice on picking character names.

Unfortunately, most of the time the way they pick character names is terrible. One of the most common clangers they make is to ask for a name “that means something”. I’m writing a story about a ballerina, and I need a name that means “dancer”. So her parents deliberately gave her a name meaning dancer, to make her become a dancer, and then it happened? If it worked that way, we’d all be calling our kids High Court Judge or Lottery Winner.

Another no-no is a character name which gives away what’s going to happen. I’m writing a fantasy story about a boy who ends up being able to control fire, what’s a name that means “fire” or “flame”? It’s not going to come as a huge shock to the reader if the character is basically called Mister Fireball, and then, amazingly, he turns out to be able to spit fireballs at will. It would seem pretty unlikely that a parent would give their kid a name with a particular meaning, and then by some astounding turn of fate, their name is what they become. Seriously, how many boys named Aidan do you know who possess a mystical power over fire?

My biggest peeve is probably when the character’s name is an obvious description of their personality, usually with protagonists given names meaning “kind”, “innocent”, “brave” and so on, while the bad guys end up with names meaning “cruel”, “evil”, or “slimy”. What parent would give their child a name which means “evil”? They would have to be so sick that if the person did end by going a bit wrong, you could only sympathise with them and put it down to the burden of being named Devious. If the heroine is called Pure Sweetangel, and her childhood pal is called Creepy Nastypants, any normal reader is going to be expecting that Creepy will turn out a bit of a rotter.

That’s the problem with naming characters – they shouldn’t look like an author named them, they should look as if their parents named them. Because that’s how people get named – by their parents. In other words, if your heroine is a sweet, simple girl, but her parents are pretentious jerks, then she won’t have a sweet simple name, but a pretentious jerky one. If she doesn’t, then you’ve got to explain why not (sweet simple godmother picked the name, family name handed down to every third daughter that’s left-handed, whatever).

Name your character the way a person is named, and then your character will seem like a person, not a character. Because no good reader wants to read a book peopled by characters. And you should only be writing for good readers. Bad readers have enough authors writing for them already.

Name News Round-Up

13 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Names in the News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Australian Aboriginal names, baby name superstitions, birth records, birth registries, changing a baby's name, choosing baby names, locational names, name changes, name combinations, name meanings, name popularity, name trends, nicknames, popular names, vintage names

I’ve read quite a few odd little snippets abut names in the news, and the holidays seems like a good opportunity to share them.

The same names popular across New South Wales

Data from the NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages shows that most areas followed the same name trends last year, despite cultural and ethnic differences. One of the major exceptions to the rule was the name Aaliyah, which is #77 across the state, but a Top Ten name in Blacktown, in Sydney’s western suburbs. At the public hospitals of Royal North Shore and Royal Prince Alfred, Oliver and Chloe were the most popular names; Olivia was the favourite name at Westmead, St George and Nepean hospitals, while Isabella topped the girl’s list at Randwick, Blacktown and Liverpool hospitals. Ethan was #1 in Liverpool, while the Central Coast was the only region to appreciate Cooper in significant numbers. Amelia proved an across-the-board favourite in almost every region, only failing to make the Top Ten in Newcastle, St Leonards, Central Coast and Blacktown.

Lismore bucks the trend

Despite this uniformity, up in Lismore in the state’s far north, they pride themselves on doing things a little differently, including baby names. In the Northern Rivers region, the most popular baby names are Riley and Mia (#20 and #5 in the state respectively). Cooper is the #2 boy’s name in Lismore, adding weight to the idea that it is coastal areas which tend to go for this name. Grace is #4 in Lismore, although #14 in the state.

Baby name regret, 1909 style

This is a story sent in by a reader to one of those columns where people send in their odd little stories.

The Unthank family of Somerville welcomed their baby daughter Hazel Ethel in 1909. Today Somerville is a suburb of Melbourne, but back then it was a rural orchard town. In order to register his daughter’s birth, Mr Unthank had to drive 10 km (6 miles) by horse and carriage to Hastings, a bustling seaside town (now another suburb).

On his way to the registry office, he dropped into the local pub to visit his wife’s family, who owned the pub, and share the good news. They all had a few drinks, and decided Hazel Ethel wasn’t suitable after all. They picked a new name, wrote it down on a piece of paper, and Mr Unthank continued his journey.

When Mr Unthank got home, he casually told his wife that he and her sisters had changed the baby’s name, but unfortunately he couldn’t remember what it was, as he had handed the slip of paper to the registrar and thought no more about it.

It was six weeks before they could find the time to visit their relatives again, and in the meantime, they had no idea what their daughter’s name was. They just called her Bubby. Eventually, they discovered her name was Zalie Vivienne Unthank, but for the rest of her life, Zalie was known by her family as Bub.

Perhaps not so strangely, both Hazel and Zalie now sound perfectly suitable as contemporary baby names. Do you think her dad and aunties made the right choice for 1909? And which one sounds better today?

(You can see the birth record for Zalie here, where her name is given as Zalie Vyvian).

Baby name superstitions

In a newspaper article from Tasmania dated 1936, it is claimed that in times gone by, it was considered lucky to choose a baby’s name before it was born. The name had to be chosen in the first nine days after birth, or it would be an unlucky child. The article unfortunately doesn’t say how long ago these superstitions were in effect.

The town that got its name back

This isn’t about baby names, but I checked my blog’s title, and it says it is about Australian names, not just baby or even people names.

The town of Mutchilba in far north Queensland is on the small side, but famed for its mangoes. In 1999, the town was quietly downgraded and removed from the map. The population of Mutchilba was (statistically speaking) moved to swell the ranks of nearby Dimbulah, which has the same postcode.

It’s said that life moves at a slower pace in the tropical heat, and perhaps that explains why the good people of Mutchilba failed to notice the change in status to their little town until July of this year. Perhaps nobody bought any new maps in the interim. Certainly nobody bothered telling them.

However, when the local paper published an article informing them of what had occurred, they were hopping mad, and launched a campaign to get their town back.

I’m happy to say they were successful, and as of October 12 this year, Mutchilba is now officially a town once more. Queensland Natural Resources and Mines Minister Andrew Cripps says the State Government fast-tracked the process, and that he took personal interest in the case, being from the far north himself.

The mayor of Mutchilba is now hoping to re-launch the Mutchilba Mango Mardi Gras, the annual festival celebrating the mango harvest, as a means of highlighting the town’s unique identity.

Mutchilba has a lovely meaning in the local language – “place of many birds”.

Shiseido and Anker: Birth Announcements from Melbourne (September)

12 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

 

Twins

Dajan Roberts Gavin and Taylah Jennifer Gail (Alyssa)

Johnny and William

Leah Wendy and Megan Jean

Nicholas Frank and Alexander William

Phillipa and Charles

 

Girls

Airlie Belle

Alysia Melinda Dianne

Annabelle June Rose (Elijah)

Aurelia Lorelai (Atticus)

Chloe Marie Magdalena

Clementine Hawthorne

Cleo Elizabeth

Greta Louise (Harriet)

Hadley Fallon (Brody, Brand)

Indiana Summer Rose (Danae, Zane)

Isabella Chaya

Isla Monae (Marley)

Lorna Juliet (Eleanor)

Nancy Frances (Mylie)

Rose Amelie (Daniel, Matthew)

Shiseido Felicity Grace “Sass” (Georgia)

Tess Margaret

Tomine Ella Suki

Vivienne Eloise

Winifred Laidley (Lucy)

 

Boys

Alby Hugh (Van)

Anker Sol (Oscar)

Arlo Winston (Stella)

Brodie Sloane

Chace Garrard (Jaxon)

Declan Brian

Eddie James (Mia, Levi, Hugo)

Flynn Willow (Kaiyha, Janahli)

Kadel Dave (Tahli, Kobie)

Kip Raymond (Jack, Darcey)

Lex Ramses

Mac Aaron (Cupcake, Jimbo, Charli)

Otis Michael Harley (James)

Owen Alexander William

Rafferty Joseph (Augustus, Georgette, Willoughby)

Riordan Jay (Jaida, Rhianna)

Robin Anton Randolph (Anouk, Clovis)

Tai Philip (Blair)

Tyson Tirirangi (Atalia, Manaia)

Xander Bryce (Monique, Yasmine)

(Picture shows the Tesselaar Tulip Festival, held in the Dandenongs just outside Melbourne; photo from the festival’s website)

Silka and Zali: Birth Announcements from Hobart (September)

12 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Silka and Zali: Birth Announcements from Hobart (September)

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

 

Girls

Ashlynn Bea Lauren

Esther Nea

Florence May (Miles)

Harriet Ellen (Audrey)

Josie Margaret (Pascal, Rohan)

Ruby Jane (Kanisha, Charlie, Wyatt, Darcy)

Sienna Isabel (Nerissa, Denzel)

Silka Elise

Tiarna Joyce (Mikayla)

Zali Olive (Jed, Greer)

 

Boys

Alec Michael Charles

Archer William Hugh

Harley Vincent (Brayden, Zack, Noah, Piper)

Henry Bart (Max, Ruby)

Hugo George

Hunter Charles Patrick

Jason Paul (Justin, Emma)

Maxwell Joseph

Theodore Liam

William Wellington

(Picture shows cherry blossoms marking the start of spring in Tasmania; photo from Tasmania’s Facebook page)

Celebrity Baby News: Another Celebrity Baby Round-Up

11 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

AFL player Matt Priddis, and his wife Ashleigh, recently welcomed their first child, and have named their daughter Nala May [pictured]. Matt plays for the West Coast Eagles, and Ashleigh is a pre-primary schoolteacher. The couple were married in 2009, with baby Nala arriving shortly before their third wedding anniversary.

NRL player Albert Kelly, and his partner, Mtia Tass, welcomed their first child last month, and named their daughter Brida-Lee. Albert is a cousin of NRL star Greg Inglis. His career got off to a rocky start until he joined Black on Track, an Aboriginal employment programme in Newcastle which taught him how to turn his life around. He has recently signed with the Gold Coast Titans.

Country music singer Melinda Schneider, and her partner, former rock vocalist Mark Gable, welcomed their son Sullivan James or “Sully” on August 28. Mark was front man for The Choirboys, and is now a radio host and an ambassador for beyondblue. Sullivan is the first child for Melinda and Mark, but he apparently has five siblings.

Actress Saskia Burmeister, and her husband, actor Jamie Croft, welcomed their first child in May. According to an international fan, Saskia and Jamie’s son is named Jackson, and claims that this information was on the Black & White & Sex Facebook page. If so, it has since been removed, and I can’t verify it, so this is just a rumour. You may recall that Saskia’s name was recently featured on the blog at public request.

Author Bronnie Ware welcomed her daughter Elena in February this year, and within 24 hours had been offered her first international book deal. Bronnie has a background working in palliative care, and her memoir, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying – A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing, has been published in 25 languages since its self-published success last year. Bronnie has just returned from a promotional tour in the UK.

Former AFL player Leigh Harding, and his wife Stacey, welcomed their daughter Milla last year. Milla was born 13 weeks premature after Stacey became dangerously ill with pre-eclampsia, and had to have an emergency caesarean in order to save her life, and Milla’s. Milla will be having her first birthday soon, and the Hardings are going on a charity walk to raise funds for Life’s Little Treasures, the foundation which gave them so much help after Milla’s birth. Leigh used to play for the North Melbourne Kangaroos, and now plays for the Werribee Tigers in the VFL.

Comedian Tim Ross, and his wife Michelle Glew-Ross, welcomed their first child last year and named their son Bugsy. Tim Ross or “Rosso” was part of a successful comedy duo with Merrick Watts for many years, Merrick and Rosso. Recently they parted ways to forge separate careers. You may remember that Tim’s former comedy partner Merrick welcomed a daughter named Kinga last year, and it seems that both have a penchant for out-of-the-ordinary baby names.

Meanings of Names

07 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Your Questions Answered

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

African names, Ancient Egyptian names, Anglo-Saxon names, animal names, Arabic names, astronomical names, bird names, Chinese names, choosing baby names, English idioms, english names, epithets, flower names, French names, German names, Google, Google searches, Greek names, hebrew names, Hindi names, Igbo Names, Indian names, Indonesian names, Japanese names, Latin names, Maori names, musical terms, mythological names, name meaning, names of constellations, nature names, Old French names, Old Norse names, Persian names, popular culture, prefixes, royal titles, Sanskrit names, scandinavian names, Spanish names, surname names, Swedish names, unisex names, Viking names, vocabulary names, Yiddish names, Zulu names

There’s many different ways to choose baby names. Some people pick out a name they like, and perhaps quickly check to make sure it doesn’t mean something horrible, like “he who has the face of a deranged warthog”, or maybe not even care what it means. Others think of a meaning they would like to associate with their baby, and then hunt around for a name that fits that meaning.

These are all the web searches people used to get to the blog this year, looking for names with particular meanings. I don’t know if I’ve always come up with a name they wanted to know about, and I’m not even completely sure that I’m correct on each one, but I did my best.

NAMES WITH MEANINGS RELATED TO STARS

Boys name that means “star”

The English word Sterling, referring to sterling silver, is said to most likely mean “little star”, as some early Norman pennies were imprinted with a small star. The Old French word for the pennies is Esterlin. We also use the word sterling to mean “excellent, of high quality”, so you get another layer of meaning from it.

Latin boy’s name meaning “star”

The Latin for star is Astrum. Astro is a Latin prefix meaning “pertaining to the stars”, as in the word astronomy. I have seen this used as a name.

Swedish girl’s name that means “star”

Stjarna.

A boy’s name that means “bright star”

Nayyar is an Arabic boy’s name which is understood as meaning “bright star”. It also refers to the sun, which of course is our nearest, and thus brightest, star.

Male name meaning “bright star in the southern hemisphere”

There’s isn’t a star name which means that, but Sirius is the brightest star in the sky, and is visible in both hemispheres. However, Canopus, the second brightest, is more often connected with the southern hemisphere; it is always visible from some parts of Australia. It is occasionally called Soheil in English, and the Maori name for it is Atuatahi, meaning “stand alone”.

Spanish girls name that means “constellation”

I’m not sure there is one, but the Spanish for constellation is Constelación. I haven’t heard of it being used as a person’s name, but Constelacia might look a bit more name-like. I don’t speak Spanish, so apologies if this looks absurd to Hispanophones.

Boy name that means “many constellations”

The Japanese name Ikuto has this meaning, although I’ve only seen it used as a fictional surname.

A constellation name which means “small”

All the constellations have names which are nouns or “things”, not adjectives, so there isn’t one. A few have Minor as part of their name, to indicate they are the smaller of two eg Ursa Minor. The closest I could find was Equuleus, meaning “little horse, foal”.

Name meaning “starry sky”

In Japanese, Hoshizora means “starry sky”. It’s used as a surname in the Japanese anime Smile Pretty Cure!

Boys name that means “galaxy”

I have seen Galaxos as a character name in online games, and Galaxian would mean “of the galaxy” or “from the galaxy”.

NATURE NAMES

Boys name that means “beach”

Beach, Bay or Cove.

Names that mean “songbird”

Hebrew has both a male and female name with this meaning. Efrona for a girl (meaning “lark”), and Zalmir for a boy.

Flower name that means “peaceful”

There’s a native plant from Western Australia called the Gunniopsis pax – it’s a succulent, and it does have small flowers. There is also the Peace Lily, and the Peace Rose, and a type of guzmania (a bromeliad) called Pax. The White Poppy, the Lotus and the Daisy have all been used as symbols of peace.

Boy name meaning “otter”

In Japanese, Rakko means “sea otter”. That seemed to be the most usable word for otter in another language I could find.

POSITIVE MEANINGS

Indian boy’s name meaning “one who cannot be defeated”

It seems to be a popular meaning for boy’s names in India, for there are several. I managed to find Adityendra, Ajay, Ajeenkya, Ajeesh, Ajit, Aparajita, and Durjaya. Take your pick!

Viking name meaning “prince”

Balder is translated as meaning “lord, prince, king”, and it was used as an epithet for heroes. In Norse mythology, Balder was the son of Odin and Frigg.

Girl name that means “independence”

Liberty or Freedom.

Sanskrit girl’s name meaning “bright, happy”

Nandita.

Girl’s name that means “beautiful”

There’s a lot. A few you may not be familiar with are Mei (Chinese), Shayna (Yiddish) and Ziba (Persian).

Name that means “bewitching”

Mohana is an Indian unisex name which means “bewitching, infatuating, charming” in Sanskrit. It is used as an epithet of several gods and goddesses.

The word for “lovely” in some other language

Delightfully vague! I pick French – Jolie.

NEGATIVE MEANINGS

Baby name that means “spiteful”

I hope this is for a story and not a real baby! The German surname Sauer means “spiteful” (related to the word sour, acid), and it can be Anglicised as either of the unrelated names Sawyer or Sayer, so I guess those are possible options.

Hindi word for “proud”

Ooh there’s quite a few. Garvi, Garvit and Nidar look the most like names, to me.

DOESN’T EXIST

Name that means “daughter of a princess”

Hmm, seems a bit narcissistic as a baby name, somehow! Anyway, there’s no term for a princess’ daughter, and the daughter of a princess doesn’t necessarily have any special status – Princess Anne’s daughter Zara is just Mrs Tindall. I would choose a name that simply means “princess” or is royal-related. However, the Indonesian name Putri means both “daughter” and “princess”.

Norse name which means “female knight”

Vikings didn’t generally fight with a cavalry, and although there were some female warriors, it’s very unlikely they would have ridden horses, as this was usually reserved for leaders of a warband. It does make me think of the Valkyries, who were mythological women of the afterlife, always depicted on horseback. Valkyrie means “chooser of the slain”.

Norse name meaning “hunter”

There isn’t one. The Old Norse word for hunter is Veiðimaður, and some think this word is the basis of the English surname Waitman. This is occasionally used as a first name.

Name for a girl that means something

More specific, please!

NAMES FOR SPECIAL CIRCUMSTANCES

Name that means “perfect time”

I know it’s not quite right, but I keep thinking Serendipity. Also Season, because of the saying that “For everything there is a season, and a time for everything under heaven”. The Japanese girl’s name Aya means “design”, suggesting a planned pregnancy. Musical names like Rhythm or Cadence come to mind, as music must be perfectly timed. Ogechukwukama is an Igbo girl’s name meaning “God’s time is the best” – good for a surprise, but very welcome, baby.

Name that means “beating the odds”

Lucky or Chance.

Boy’s name that means “when two souls join”

I’d probably be thinking of names that mean “bliss, joy”. Anand is a Sanskrit name meaning “bliss”, while Anglo-Saxon has Wynn, meaning “joy, bliss”. The word Bliss itself can be used for both sexes. The Chinese unisex name Zheng or Zeng means “harmony, union”, which seems to describe the state of soul togetherness.

Zulu name for boys that gives hope for the future

Mduduzi is a Zulu boy’s name that means “bringer of hope”.

Boy’s name meaning “not meant to be”

Oh how sad, and what a sad meaning. I’m so sorry. I thought long and hard about this one, and it seems to me that the concept behind “meant to be” and “not meant to be” is the same, that is, some idea of Fate, Fortune or Destiny. We usually think of it as feminine (“Dame Fortune” etc), but the Ancient Egyptians had a god of fate, named Shai or Shay, meaning “that which is ordained”. I think that’s a nice name for a boy, and has the sense of the meaning you’re looking for.

(Picture shows the Milky Way above Lake Moogerah in south-east Queensland; photo from Perth Now)

Zo and Ziggy: Birth Announcements from Sydney (September)

05 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

Twins

Sebastian Willem and Mathias Clifford

 

Girls

Ainslie Ilma (Bradley, Brooke, Peyton)

Annabel Scarlett (Xavier)

Ava Charlize (Chace, Hayden)

Colette Anna

Isabella Margaret (Kurt, Shae, Charlotte)

Kitty Francesca (Harry, Eliza)

Skyler Sandy (Matisse, Jarrah)

Sybella Madeline (Dylan)

Talila Jade

Zo La (Mathieu)

 

Boys

Boston William Tyler

Euan Martin (Georgia)

Jeffery Django

Kip Benjamin

Lewis Richard John

Liam Edmund (Kathryn, Lachlan, Emily, Madeleine, Charlotte)

Mitchell Coventry (Tyler, Ashton, Flynn)

Thomas Yorke (Sophie)

Yanni Judah

Ziggy Jonah Winter

(Picture shows a whale kite at the Festival of the Winds on Bondi Beach on September 9, in which early spring breezes enable a spring kite festival; photo from the Daily Mail)

Ojas and Sasha: Birth Announcements from Canberra (September)

05 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Ojas and Sasha: Birth Announcements from Canberra (September)

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

Twins

Sophie May and Zoe Jane (Emma)

 

Girls

Aislinn Ruby Blythe (Ethan)

Amelie Fleur

Eliza Clare (Hayden)

Gabriella Hope (Amelia, Imogen)

Genevieve Helena (Adeline)

Jade Daphne (Isla)

Jessie Rose (Jaden, Ari)

Nelly-Anne (Lennox)

Rosie Eileen (Oliver, Lucy, Archie)

Sierra Madeline

 

Boys

Angus Charles Bruce

Clancy Edward (Noah, Arlo)

Frank Brian Cooper

Jaxon Hiipa

Jonathan Norman “Jack” (Charlotte)

Kai Basil John (Maya)

Ojas

Ryker Scott John (Ayva)

Sasha Alexander (Anthony)

Zander David (Kaela)

(Picture shows flowers at Canberra’s Floriade, Australia’s biggest spring festival, which began in September; photo from festival website)

Celebrity Baby News: Celebrity Baby Round-Up

04 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring, unisex names

I’ve been very busy and got behind with the celebrity babies, so it seems like a good time to do a quick catch-up.

NRL player Gareth Widdop, and his fiancee Carley, welcomed their daughter Harper Rose on September 30, just hours after Gareth’s team, the Melbourne Storm, won the NRL Premiership. She was born unexpectedly in Bowral as they were travelling between Sydney and Melbourne. Harper joins big brother Brayden, aged 2. Gareth is originally from Yorkshire, in England, and moved to Melbourne as a teenager. He has been signed with the Storm since 2010, although he played for several years in their Under 18s and Under 20s programmes. He has also played for England internationally.

Actress Madeleine West, and her husband Shannon Bennett, welcomed their daughter Xanthe fairly recently. Xanthe joins big sisters Phoenix and Xascha, and big brother Hendrix (a real X-theme there). Madeleine became a household name on soapie Neighbours, and regularly appears in other television series. Shannon is the restaurateur at Vue de Monde, recently named Restaurant of the Year by The Age Good Food Guide.

NRL player Anthony Cherrington, and his on-off girlfriend, bikini model Monique Mears, welcomed their daughter Christine not long ago. Christine Cherrington joins big brother Moses, aged 17 months. Anthony is originally from New Zealand, and plays for the Sydney Roosters, but has been sidelined by injury since 2010.

Paralympian Erik Horrie, and his fiancee Michelle, welcomed their son Lewis in early September during the Paralympic Games; they already have two daughters together. Erik was in a car accident at the age of 21 which left him with paraplegia, and he started out playing wheelchair basketball. Last year he took up rowing, and he won a silver medal at the 2012 Paralympic Games.

NRL veteran Steve Menzies, and his wife Suyin, welcomed their son Harper Mackie on August 22. Harper Menzies was born at at 4.24pm at Royal North Shore Private Hospital weighing 2.79kg (just under 6 lb). His middle name is after his great-grandfather, Mackie Campbell, a pioneer with the Manly Sea Eagles. He joins big sister Miller, aged 2. Steve played for the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles from 1993-2008; he then played for the Bradford Bulls in England, and is currently with the Catalans Dragons in France. Yep, two NRL babies named Harper – one male, one female.

Netball champion Sharelle McMahon, and her husband Brek Mansfield, welcomed their first child on August 30 and have named their son Xavier Gaz. Sharelle is the former captain of the Melbourne Vixens, has played for the national team, the Diamonds, and has won three gold medals and a silver at the Netball World Championships, and two gold and two silver at Commonwealth Games.

Dating show contestant Jenny Blake, and her husband Mark Geppert, welcomed their son Angus – Gus for short – back in the autumn [pictured]. Angus Geppert joins big sister Olive, aged 2. Jenny is one of the few female farmers to have appeared on rural romance reality show, The Farmer Wants a Wife. Although love didn’t work out for Jenny on the show, she soon became engaged to Mark, who she’d been friends with for years, but considered slightly too young for her. The happy Geppert family now live on their farm in southern New South Wales.

Comedian Julian Morrow, and his wife Lisa Pryor, welcomed their second child early in the year and named their son Ed. I’m not sure whether Ed is short for Edward/Edwin/Edgar/Edmund etc, or if that’s his whole name. Ed Morrow has a big sister named Anna, aged 3. Julian has been a comedy staple on television for many years, and is best known for his work with the satiric and sometimes controversial show, The Chaser. Lisa is a former journalist who is now training in medicine.

Name Update: Master Angus Waltzes In!

02 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Updates

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

choosing baby names, name combinations, sibsets

Claire and Liam seemed as if they were running out of time to find a baby name, with two weeks to go, and no name agreed on. After their story was posted, the couple managed to choose a girl’s name quite easily, with either Tilda Eden or Mabel Eden decided upon. It was so easy that Claire was convinced the baby would be a boy, as they still hadn’t come up with any male names.

It turned out she was correct, as they welcomed their fourth child and third son on September 20, weighing a sturdy 4.1 kg (9lb 4oz). It took them a day and a half to think of a name for him, with their early choice Isaiah still a contender right up to the last minute. Liam suggested James, and Hunter was a genuine possibility, but in the end they chose

ANGU$ JERE*MY

baby brother to M@rty, J@sper and Be$$y.

Angus was the first name on Claire’s name list after Isaiah, and Liam and the children all liked it the best. Claire liked Angus because it sounds nice and strong, and easier to pronounce than Isaiah. The middle name is a family name. They’ve received very positive feedback from family and friends, who think it’s a good choice which fits in well with his siblings.

Congratulations to Claire and Liam for their new son, and for finding the perfect name for him, which has pleased everyone. It wasn’t that hard after all!

(Picture shows Glen Clova from the Angus Glens, in the Angus region of north-east Scotland; photo from Panaramio)

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