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Waltzing More Than Matilda

Yearly Archives: 2012

“Nell” and “Paddy”: Birth Announcements from the “Canberra Times” (February)

23 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Harper Mae and Lucas Robert

 

Girls

Alice Joan Marie (Samuel)

Alyssa Leanne Elizabeth (Harrison)

Antonia Kinanti

Aria Rose (Scarlett)

Brin Bobbi (Blake, Kade, Nate)

Ellen Agnes “Nell” (Mathias, Hugo, Anna)

Felicity Rowena

Kaydence Elva

Ruby Kate (Riley)

Zoe Alexis

 

Boys

Archibald Francis John “Archie” (Sofia)

Benjamin David John

Darcy Treyborn (Cooper, Flynn)

James Michael Wolodymir (Patrick, Laura, Emma)

Myles Aden Edward

Patrick Andrew “Paddy”

Riley Sawyer (Lucas)

Rocco Carlo (Gianni)

Rohan Jeffrey

Toby James “TJ”

(Photo of belly dancers at the National Multicultural Festival, held in Canberra during February)

Only Natural – Nature Names from the Bonds Baby Search

22 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

animal names, astronomical names, Australian Aboriginal names, colour names, english names, flower names, food names, French names, fruit names, gemstone names, geographic names, nature names, plant names, season names, Thai names, tree names, vocabulary names, weather names

GIRLS

Acacia

Anise

Autumn

Azalea

Berry

Briar

Cedar

Cherry

Clover

Crystal

Cypress

Dahlia

Dawn

Dusty

Ember

Emerald

Honey

Indigo

Ivory

Jacaranda (this South American tree is so popular, it is often assumed to be native)

Jewel

Juniper

Mallee (a native tree; name of Australian Aboriginal origin)

Magenta

Misty

Ocean

Opal

Peaches

Pearl

Pepper

Rain

Raven

Saffron

Sage

Sapphire

Scarlet

Season

Soleil (French word for the sun)

Star

Sunshine

Swai (Thai word for the iridescent shark)

Tigerlily

Tulip

Winter

 

BOYS

Ash

Aspen

Baye

Bear

Bryne

Clay

Cove

Fin

Flint

Fox

Heath

Jarrah (a very tall and strong native tree; name of Australian Aboriginal origin)

Layke

Onyx

Reed

Reef

River

Rock

Rowan

Rye

Silvan

Sky

Storm

Sunny

Talon

Teal

Tiger

Tyde

Wolf

(Photo of Mother Cummings Peak Track, Tasmania from There’s Nothing Like Australia website).

Celebrity Baby News: Brett and Selina Clappis

22 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby news, flower names, Matilda Awards

Channel 10 reporter, Brett Clappis, and his wife Selina, welcomed their first child this week, and have named her Dahlia Marie.

Brett works for Network Ten Adelaide, and last year won a SA Media Award for his reports on the flooding of Lake Eyre. Selina (nee Whillas) worked for a Port Lincoln caravan park before her marriage. She and Brett were married in 2008.

The stylish flower name Dahlia won a Matilda Award on the blog last year, so I’m guessing many will approve of of the couple’s choice.

Famous Names: Sebastian and Jenson

21 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Disney names, english names, fictional namesakes, Google, honouring, Latin names Greek names, locational names, Mer de Noms, name history, name meaning, name popularity, nicknames, popular names, pseudonyms, royal names, saints names, Shakespearean names, surname names, UK popularity

The Australian Grand Prix was held in Melbourne on the weekend, and before the event there was plenty of buzz in the media around German Sebastian Vettel, and British Jenson Button. These glamorous visitors from Europe always get a lot of attention, for both are handsome and charming; Vettel amusing and slightly mysterious, Button affable and quietly confident. In the end, Button opened the F1 season with a victory, winning comfortably against Vettel with a 2.2 second margin. It is his third Australian Grand Prix victory. (Picture has Vettel on the left in black).

I thought we’d take a look at the names of both these Formula One champions, because Sebastian and Jenson are Googled often to reach my blog, and so far I haven’t added any requested boys names to the Featured Names list, while I’ve been quite conscientious about adding the girls.

Sebastian is from the Latin name Sebastianus, which means “from Sebaste”. There were several places called Sebaste, because it is the Greek form of Augusta, named in honour of the Emperor Augustus. His adopted name meant “great, majestic, venerable”. There are towns in modern-day Turkey and Palestine with this name (or a version of it), still with ancient Roman ruins which can be visited.

The name became well known because of Saint Sebastian, a 3rd century Roman soldier originally from southern France. Skilled at converting people, according to legend he was shot through with arrows, yet did not die, so had to be martyred twice. He became popular in the Middle Ages because he was said to protect people from the plague, and also began to be depicted as a beautiful, semi-nude young man. (In early pictures, he looks like an ordinary bearded fully-clothed saint).

The name was popular amongst Continental royalty and nobility, and still retains a slightly upper-class image. Sebastian is Viola’s twin brother in Shakespeare’s gender-switching romantic comedy, Twelfth Night. Lord Sebastian Flyte is one of the main characters in Evelyn Waugh’s novel, Brideshead Revisited; beautiful and rather fey, the TV series and film makes it clear Sebastian is homosexual, although this is left ambiguous in the novel. Indeed, Saint Sebastian himself is considered a gay icon (for pretty flimsy reasons), and the name was a code for homosexuality; Oscar Wilde’s pseudonym was Sebastian Melmoth. So far, so androgynous.

However, the name got a watery overhaul when the name Sebastian was given to a Jamaican lobster in the Disney film, The Little Mermaid. Sebastian is a court composer, and a good friend and adviser to Ariel, the mermaid of the title. A Rastafarian who can lay down a reggae beat, he has given the name a new level of cool. The choice of his name seems like a deliberate reference to another famous composer: Johann Sebastian Bach. Incidentally, Sebastian is the lobster’s surname – his first name is Horatio (maybe after the American composer, Horatio Parker).

Sebastian first entered the charts in the 1960s and began steadily climbing, to become Top 100 by the 2000s. At #38 it still seems to be gaining in popularity – an elegant name that belongs to many people’s favourite Disney character.

Jenson is a lot more straightforward. It’s a surname which is basically a form of Johnson, being based on the name Jens, a short form of Johannes. According to Lou at Mer de Noms (rather a Jenson Button fan), the name Jenson has edged itself into the UK Top 100, and its growing popularity can be attributed almost solely to Mr Button himself. As to how he got his name, he was named after a family friend, Erling Jensen (father of F1 driver Steven Jensen). The spelling was altered so that it didn’t reference Jensen Motors, who made British sports cars until the 1970s.

It’s an attractive name, and one I think we’d be using in spades if Jenson Button was Australian. As it is, it’s one many parents are at least putting on their lists, although my personal feeling is that Jensen is slightly more popular, thanks to handsome American actor Jensen Ackles, from Supernatural. As I’ve said before, with female Jennifer become less popular, it gives male names starting with Jen- more of a chance.

When I try to decide which name I like best, Sebastian or Jenson, I find myself in private debate. If I take the side of Sebastian, it seems more sophisticated than Jenson, complex and multi-syllabled, romantic and princely. On the other hand, if I take the side of Jenson, it seems more laddish and chipper, down-to-earth and unpretentious, with oodles of cheeky British charm.

So I am content to say these are both very nice names, and I won’t force them to compete against each other in some Baby Name Grand Prix. When it comes to nicknames for them, I think of Seb and Bastian, and Jens and Sonny, respectively.

Short and Sweet: Nicknames, Short Forms and Pet Forms for Girls from Bonds Baby Search

21 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Gaelic names, nicknames

The sister list to Cute and Concise. As with the list of boy nicknames, it’s possible some of these babies have a full version of their nickname which didn’t make it onto the entry form.

Addey (short for Adelaide et al)

Allie

Annie

Beth

Betsy

Billie

Bobbie

Bridie (short for Bridget)

Briella (short for Gabriella)

Callie

Cammy (short for Cameron?)

Cassie

Cedes (short for Mercedes)

Chasey (short for Chastity)

Cleo

Coco (short for Colette etc)

Demi (short for Demetria etc)

Dida (short for Candida)

Edie (short for Edith or Eden)

Effie (as well as being short for Euphemia, can also be an Anglisation of the Gaelic name Oighrig)

Elle (short for Eleanor et al)

Emmy

Etta

Frankie

Freda (short for Alfreda, Winifreda et al)

Georgie

Gigi (short for Georgine or Virginie)

Greta (short for Margareta)

Hallie (short for Harriet)

Jessie

Kirsty (short for Christina)

Kitty

Lexi or Lexie

Liana (short for Juliana)

Libby (short for Isabel, and by extension, Elizabeth)

Livvy (short for Olivia)

Lori

Lottie

Lulu

Margot (short for Marguerite)

Melia

Mimi (short for Maria etc)

Mina (short for Wilhelmina)

Minka (short for Wilhelmina)

Minnie (short for Wilhelmina)

Nelle (short for Eleanor et al)

Nim (short for Nimue?)

Nina (short for Antonina et al)

Peggy

Penny

Pippa

Pippi

Polly

Rita (short for Margarita)

Rosie

Sadie (short for Sarah)

Sally (short for Sarah)

Sasha (short for Alexandra et al)

Stevie (short for Stephanie)

Tammy (short for Tamara, Tamsin et al)

Tess (short for Teresa etc)

Thandie (short for Thandiwe)

Tia (short for Letitia et al)

Tiana (short for Tatiana, Christiana et al)

Tilda

Tildy

Tilly or Tillie

Tina (short for Christina et al)

Tori (short for Victoria)

Vida (short for Davida)

Willa (short for Wilhelmina)

Winnie (short for Winifred)

Cute and Concise: Nicknames, Short Forms and Pet Forms for Boys from Bonds Baby Search

20 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Irish names, Italian names, nicknames

Are you stressed, busy, leading a hectic lifestyle? Too time-poor to keep saying a full name every day? Then you need … a nickname for your child! A nickname can shave valuable seconds off each day, saving you minutes every year. Minutes you can productively spend saying, “No that’s his full name”. (Unless you’ve picked a pet form which is the same length as the original name, in which case no time will be saved).

Abe

Alby (as well as being short for Albert etc, this can also be an Anglicisation of the Irish name Ailbhe)

Alfie

Andy

Ardie (short for Arden?)

Augie (short for Augustus etc)

Bastian (short for Sebastian)

Benji

Bob or Bobby

Brax (short for Braxton)

Cam (short for Cameron or Camden)

Chas (short for Charles)

Clarrie (short for Clarence)

Danny

Dennie (short for Dennis)

Dion (short for Dionysus etc)

Drew

Ed, Eddy or Eddie

Franky

Fred, Freddy or Freddie

Gabe

Geordie (pet form of George)

Gus (short for Augustus or Angus)

Jace (short for Jason)

Jamie

Jax

Jed

Jens (short for Johannes)

Jez (short for Jeremy)

Jimmy

Joe or Joey

Jonty (short for Jonathan)

Jordi (short for Jordan)

Josh

Judd

Kal

Lex

Mack

Manny (short for Emmanuel etc)

Matt or Matty

Mick

Monty (short for Montgomery etc)

Ned

Oli or Ollie (short for Oliver)

Ozzie (short for Oscar et al)

Raffy (short for Rafferty)

Rafi (short for Rafael)

Randy (short for Randall et al)

Reggie (short for Reginald)

Ricky

Rino (short for Italian names ending in -rino)

Robbie

Sacha

Sandy

Sol (as well as being short for Solomon, can also be named after the sun)

Tavian (short for Octavian)

Ted or Teddy

Terry

Theo

Tom or Tommy

Tyler (short for Tyler et al)

Vinnie

Will

Zah (short for Zahmir et al)

Zeph (short for Zephaniah or Zephyr)

Zeke

Bonnie Blue and Tildy Wren: My Favourite Girls’ Names from the Bonds Baby Search

19 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

name combinations

Adelaide Bessie

Alice Marjorie

Anais Genevieve

Arielle Sunday

Azalea Phoenix

Bonnie Blue

Cedar Tiaz

Chai Amaya

Chanelle Lulu

Ciara Niamh

Cordelia Nette

Cynthia Rose

Eden Love

Elisa Anita

Evelyn Violet

Faith Diamond

Guinevere Lily

Halo Breeze

Harper Papillon

Honor Jewel

Indigo Peaches

Isadora Eve

Isla Pearl

Jasmine Oriwia

Kandice Chilli

Kiana Bumbles

Lilly Teo

London Aspen

Luella Audrey

Magali Coraline

Maia Persis

Margot Alice

Marley Bean

Miette Evie

Oceanna Zoe

Olivia Isis

Pepper Faith

Perri Sweetpea

Polly Boo

Rosalie Dawn

Ru Xue

Sinead Louise

Star Violet

Stellar Coco

Temperance Ivy

Thandiwe Arabella

Tildy Wren

Vida Louise

Violet Bee

Vivienne Elise

Winter Rose

Zanthie Minx

Levi Jagger and Wolf Ryder: My Favourite Boys’ Names from the Bonds Baby Search

19 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

name combinations

Ashton Fox

Astro River

Benjamin Hillel

Blade Lucian

Brandon Bleu

Byron Lewis

Charlie Albert

Cian Ciaran

Darcy Lyle

Declan Danger

Diesel Cruz

Dylan Chief

Eamon Fergus

Eden Warwick

Emil Auguste

Flint Rifo

Harlem Cue

Harper Hendrix

Jackson Teddy

Jad Taio

Jett Reeve

Jia Shun

Julian Jay

Justice Vincent

Kormak Magnus

Levi Jagger

Logan Radley

Lowel Jacob

Luke Phoenix

Maddox Andre

Maxmilian Aston

Miles Otto

Monte Flynn

Noah Anakin

Oakley Lorne

Oistin Andrew

Oliver Rossi

Paxton Felix

Reggie Lee

Romeo Lucien

Sebastian Xavier

Silas Ari

Sonny Keepa

Taeo Rayne

Tai Kingston

Tynnan James

Vegas York

William Cadel

Wolf Ryder

Wyatt Blaze

Xavier Armour

Zenith Vedder

MYTH: Very Popular Names Should be Avoided, Because in Thirty Years They Will Sound Dated and Embarassing

18 Sunday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Name Mythbusters

≈ 16 Comments

Tags

classic names, name popularity, name predictions, name trends, nicknames, popular names, retro names, Shakespearean names

Along with all the articles on popular names that came out with the 2011 name data, there were several which warned parents not to give their baby a name from the Top 10 , because in thirty years it will sound old and frumpy.

I don’t know why they all decided thirty years was the point at which this would occur – I would have thought by the age of thirty, you would be too mature to care if you had a fashionable name or not anyway. Seriously, if you are over the age of thirty, and thinking ZOMG my name is like totally lame and uncool now! all I can tell you is Get a grip! You’re not in high school any more. Also, nobody has used ZOMG since 2007.

Of course, it’s kind of silly, because if everyone stopped using the Top 10 names because they were too popular, then they wouldn’t be Top 10 any more, ten other names would be. The only way you can avoid some names being at the top of the popularity lists is to have a law that each name can only be used once per year. In which case, pity the kids born in December, who will be named Farqui-Neemehoor or Exmayhemaliah.

However, putting that rather obvious objection aside, I decided to take a look at the Top 10 of 1982, to see if those names really had dated as badly as the Commodore 64, Bucks Fizz, and puffed shoulders, or were still going strong, like Angelina Jolie, environmental activism, and deely bobbers.

GIRLS

1. Sarah: Classic name which has never left the rankings. Has been Top 100 since the 1960s. Currently gently declining at #31.

2. Rebecca: Almost continually in the rankings, only dropping off in the 1930s. Was Top 100 from the 1960s until the late 2000s. Currently gently declining in the mid 100s.

3. Melissa: Has charted since the 1950s, and was Top 100 from the 1960s to the 2000s. Currently stable in the mid-300s.

4. Jessica: Has charted since the 1960s, and was Top 10 by the 1980s. It kept climbing, and became the #1 name of the 1990s. Currently stable at #20.

5. Nicole: Has charted since the 1950s, and was Top 100 from the 1960s until the late 2000s. Currently stable in the low 200s.

6. Lauren: Has charted since the 1940s, and was Top 10 by the 1980s. It continued to climb, and peaked in the 1990s. Lauren has only just left the Top 100, and is probably in the very low 100s.

7. Michelle: Has charted since the 1940s, and was Top 100 from the 1950s to the 2000s. Currently stable in the mid-100s.

8. Kate: Ranked in the 1900s, but dropped off the charts from the 1930s to the 1950s. Was Top 100 from the 1970s until the very end of the 2000s. Currently stable in the low 100s; however I believe this name is not finished, and may rejoin the Top 100.

9. Emma: Almost continuously in the rankings, only dropping off in the 1940s. Has been Top 100 since the 1970s. Currently #17 and on a slight rise.

10. Lisa: Has charted since the 1940s, and was Top 100 from the 1960s to the 2000s. Currently declining in the mid-500s.

BOYS

1. Michael: Solid classic that’s never left the Top 100, and was Top 10 from 1940 to the 2000s. Currently stable at #35.

2. Mathew: Classic name that has never left the rankings, and has been Top 100 since the 1950s. Currently gently declining at #32.

3. Andrew: Solid classic that’s never left the Top 100, and was Top 10 from the 1960s to the 1990s. Currently stable at #70.

4. David: Solid classic that’s never left the Top 100, and was Top 10 from the 1940s to the 1990s. Currently stable at #78.

5. Daniel: Solid classic that’s never left the Top 100, and was Top 10 from the 1970s to the late 2000s. Currently gently declining at #24.

6. Christopher: Classic name that has never left the rankings. It was Top 100 in the 1900s, and returned to it in the 1940s. Currently stable at #84.

7. Benjamin: Classic name that has never left the rankings, and has been Top 100 since the 1970s. Currently on a decline at #11.

8. James: Solid, enduring classic that has never left the Top 20. It was Top 10 from the 1900s to the 1940s, and then again from the 1980s to the late 2000s. Currently on a slight decline at #12.

9. Mark: Classic name that has never left the rankings, and was Top 100 from the 1940s to the late 2000s. Currently stable in the low 200s.

10. Luke: Has charted since the 1940s, and been Top 100 since the 1970s. Currently declining at #33.

From the girls’ list, three of them are still in the Top 100, and from the boys’ list nine of them are still Top 100. Of the names that have left the Top 100, most of them are stable, rather than becoming ever less popular. Michelle and Nicole may not sound the freshest, but the 100s and 200s are not the dim backwoods of the popularity charts (they are where where Mary and Clara live). Melissa and Lisa are probably the most dated-sounding of the names, but they are on the charts, which means that parents are still using them. Based on the data above, I think that’s pretty much a BUSTED.

However, another theory I’ve seen on baby name forums is that the names of thirty years ago have become so firmly entrenched that they now seem a little … well, boring. This idea does have some merit, because although names such as Emma and Andrew are absolutely great, and nobody will criticise you for using them, nobody is going to say, “Oh what a stunningly beautiful and unusual name; I’m sure there’s a fascinating story behind your choice of it,” either. Which is fine, not everyone wants their child’s name to be a constant source of comments and questions. But I’d be edging towards a PLAUSIBLE on that one.

So where will our current Top 10 be in thirty years? Some would say it’s foolish to speculate, but on the basis that the best predictor of the future is the past, I’ll have a stab at it. That’s how I do my footy tipping anyway.

The average time that a popular girl’s name spent in the Top 100 was 46 years, which means about half the girls’ names from the current Top 10 are contenders for staying in the Top 100 until 2042. Of the names from 1982 which have lasted, Sarah and Emma had a long history of being on the charts, while Jessica was still gaining in popularity. Based on that, I’d say classics Charlotte and Amelia have the best chance for being stayers, while another Shakespearean coinage, Olivia, could keep going and going.

Chloe, Isabella and Sophie seem as if they will at the very least remain relatively stable in the 100s, like Rebecca, Michelle and Lauren. I’m picking Ava to be the Nicole of our times (200s), and Sienna to be another Melissa (300s). Because Lisa was the least successful name, and a cute nickname form of a longer name, perhaps Mia will also not fare so well long term. Ruby and Kate are retro names that have gone in and out of fashion, and I think both are quite unpredictable.

As far as the boys names go, chances are that 90% of them will still be in the Top 100 by 2042. I’m picking Joshua to be the name that doesn’t go the distance, as it is currently in the same decline that Mark was in 1982. Two of the names from 1982, Benjamin and James, are barely outside the Top 10 today, and I would back Ethan and Lucas as the most likely to mimic that success.

Results are unscientific and for entertainment purposes only. Baby Name Mythbusters is not affiliated with the television show, “Mythbusters”.

Names From Bonds Baby Search: British-ish Names

17 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Contests

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Breton names, Cornish names, Irish names, mythological names, Scottish names, Welsh names

These are names from the British languages of Ireland, Wales, Cornwall, Scotland and Brittany. I’ve called the list “British-ish” because many of the names have been Anglicised or are otherwise “inspired” by these languages rather than being strictly authentic. If you’re thinking there are many names missing, they could well turn up on other lists … Pronunciations and origins to the best of my knowledge.

GIRLS

Aneira (Welsh)

Aoife (EEF-ya – Irish)

Ashleen (variant modern Irish)

Bree (Anglicised Irish)

Bridget (Anglicised Irish)

Cailin (ka-LEEN – faux-Irish)

Carys (modern Welsh)

Ciara (KEE-ruh – Irish)

Eilish (EE-leesh – Anglicised Irish)

Fianna (fee-ANN-uh – Irish)

Isibeal (ISH-ih-bale – Irish)

Maela (MAH-el-uh – Breton)

Niamh (NEEV – Irish)

Nimueh (NIM-oo-ay – variant mythological Welsh)

Rhiannon (mythological Welsh)

Saoirse (SEER-sha – modern Irish)

Seren (modern Welsh)

Shayla (faux-Irish)

Sian (SHAHN – Welsh)

Sinead (SHIN-ayd – Irish)

Siobhan (SHIV-on – Irish)

Tegan (modern Welsh)

 

BOYS

Braith (Welsh?)

Brendan (Latinised Irish)

Bryn (Welsh)

Cadel (Welsh)

Caelan (KAY-len – Anglicised Irish)

Cian (KEEN – Irish)

Cillian (KIL-ee-an – Irish)

Denzel (variant Cornish?)

Duncan (Scottish)

Eamon (AY-mon – Irish)

Eoghan (O-in – Scottish/Irish)

Ewan (Anglicised Scottish/Irish)

Fergus (Anglicised Scottish/Irish)

Finlay (Anglicised Scottish/Irish)

Fionn (FIN – Irish)

Griffin (Latinised Welsh)

Ian (Scottish)

Jock (Scottish)

Kormak (variant Scottish/Irish)

Lorcan (Irish)

Malachy (MAL-uh-kee – Irish)

Morgan (Anglicised Welsh)

Neil (Irish/Scottish)

Oistin (OHS-teen – Irish)

Ronan (Irish)

Ruairidh (RAWR-ee – Irish)

Seirian (modern Welsh)

Shea (SHAY – Anglicised Irish)

Talisyn (variant mythological Welsh)

Taryn (variant modern Welsh?)

Tighe (TYGE – Irish)

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