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~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

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Yearly Archives: 2012

Saturday Sibset: The Family From the Emerald Isle

17 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Sibsets in the News

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

classic names, fictional namesakes, Gaelic names, Irish names, locational names, mythological names, name history, name meaning, popular names, popularity in Ireland, saints names, sibsets

It’s Saint Patrick’s Day today, so of course this week’s sibset is from Ireland. The Hoban family moved to Australia in 2005 from the town of Wicklow, south of Dublin.

After selling their family business, Mr and Mrs Hoban wanted to show their four sons the world, so they went to Adelaide as temporary residents, where Mrs Hoban got a job as a nurse. However, life in Adelaide must have been good to them, because they decided to make it their permanent home.

They wanted to become citizens in 2007, but missed the cut-off by three days, after the law changed so that residents had to be living here for four years instead of two. Their fourth anniversary came up in October 2011, but they decided to delay just a bit further so that they could become citizens on Australia Day this year.

Mr Hoban says that leaving behind their friends, family and jobs was a “huge deal”, but now every time they leave Adelaide and come back, he is so happy he could “kiss the ground”. The youngest Hoban children have spent more than half their lives in Australia, and it means more to them than their country of birth.

Australia has a great fondness for Irish names, so we’ll have a look at the Hobans and see whether they have names already familiar here.

Kevin: Kevin is the father of the family, and as we well know, his name is considered a classic here, and still used fairly often. Luckily he didn’t migrate to Germany or one of the many other nations who don’t view Kevin kindly.

Tona: Tona is Kevin’s wife, and her name is usually taken to be a pet form of the name Antonia. However, there is a Scandinavian name Tona, meaning “fresh thunder”. Although Wicklow is said to have been settled by Vikings, the first one is probably more likely. It’s very similar to names such as Toni and Tonia.

Darragh (20): There are two possible sources for this name, pronounced DAH-rah, although in an Australian accent, I suspect it comes out as DARR-uh. One is that it’s a variant of the name Dara, which means “oak tree”. It is the same source as the name of the city of Derry or Londonderry in Northern Ireland. Oak trees were sacred in Celtic mythology, and there was a sixth century Saint MacDara (son of Dara), who was one of those reclusive island-dwelling hermit saints who flourished in Ireland. He has given his name to the tiny islet off the coast of Connemara on which he sequestered himself. Darragh can also be an Anglicised form of the name Dáire, meaning both “fruitful, fertile, rutting” and “tumult, rage, violence”. There are many kings and heroes of Irish legend with this name, and they may all go back ultimately to a god of the Otherworld. Despite its ancient origins, Darragh came into general use in Ireland fairly recently, so most of us wouldn’t have heard of it yet, although it is currently #16 in Ireland. However, it’s a wonderful name, extremely masculine, and one which I think Australians could easily embrace. It sounds comfortingly like that Aussie standard, Darren, and has also been Latinised as Darius.

Ryan (18): This name is very popular in both Ireland and Australia, although more popular in its country of origin, being #6 at present, while it’s #57 in South Australia.

Cian (14): This means “ancient” in Gaelic, and is pronounced KEE-an or KEEN. It’s another name from Irish legend, and is also recorded as the name of a Welsh poet. Cian is #14 in Ireland, and although it isn’t as popular here, it’s fairly well known and in use. There are also several variants and derivatives used, such as Kian, Keene, Keane, Keenan and so on.

Evin (12): This is the Anglicised form of the Gaelic name Éimhín, which may mean “swift”. There is a sixth century Saint Éimhín, who was from Munster, but a monk at an abbey in County Wexford. He is said to have written a biography of Saint Patrick, which makes it a great name for St Patrick’s Day. Evin is rare in both Ireland and Australia, although the name can also be Anglicised to its soundalike, Evan, and this name is #27 in Ireland and #95 in South Australia. Evin also has his dad’s name, minus the K – perhaps deliberate?

So out of six genuine Irish names, one is a classic, one is popular, one is in use, and the other three have a familiar sound to them and seem very usable.

Sage and Atticus: Birth Announcements from the “Sydney Morning Herald” (February)

16 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

Girls

Abbey Rose (Xavier, Lillian)

Alexandra Juliette (Max, Nathalie)

Amlie Rose

Chelsea Jane

Henrietta Elizabeth (Hugo, Beatrix)

Matilda Rachel (Gemma)

Rianna Anne

Sage Zara Joy

Saoirse Kirsten

 

Boys

Archie Reeve (Chloe, Ava, Jack, Charlie, Annie-Rose)

Atticus Jack

Daniel Anthony

Gabriel Philip

Henry Howard

Konrad Kurt Wilhelm

Sebastian Maxwell (Sophia, Clementine)

Toby Spencer (Benny)

Tristan Price (Joshua, Melanie, Stephanie)

(Picture shows the Australian Open of Surfing, held during February on Manly Beach)

Grace Mira de Faye: Birth Announcements from Sydney’s Southern and Outer Suburbs

16 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Grace Mira de Faye: Birth Announcements from Sydney’s Southern and Outer Suburbs

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Lilia Beau and Piper Eilee

 

Girls

Annabelle Charlie Florence (Christian, Samuel)

Ava Matisse (Rhys, Logan)

Edie Lillee (Lola, Lottie)

Estelle Josephine

Grace Mira de Faye

Indiana Jean (Blake, Zane)

Lacey Skye

Pyper Susan (Emerald, Bede)

Summer Savannah (Grace, Jake)

 

Boys

Alexander Andrew

Jack Ashley (Alexis)

Jesse Christopher

Kip Maxwell

Lucian James

Mackenzie Harrison (Harley)

River Paul (Eva)

Ty John

Zach Hamilton (Noah)

(Picture shows the Red Bull Cliff Diving World Series Qualifications, held during February on the Hawkesbury River)

New Australian Study on Baby Names

15 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Names in the News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Associate Professor Jo Lindsay, choosing baby names, Dr Deb Dempsey, Monash University, name sociology, name studies, Swinburne University of Technology, What's in a Name?

A new study on how parents choose their children’s names is being undertaken by Dr Deb Dempsey from Swinburne University of Technology and Associate Professor Jo Lindsay from Monash University.

“Naming decisions may be guided by culture and tradition. They may also be shaped by our sense of connection or belonging to family history, other identity issues, personal taste and fashion,” Dr Dempsey said.

The Preliminary Results:

50% just like the sound of the name

20% base their decision on cultural significance

15% choose a name that suits their surname

11% name their children after a celebrity or book character

4% are inspired to use the name of someone they admire

How These Children Received Their Names:

Charles: A traditional name that can be modernised to give more options. Also, a short name to match a very long surname.

Kiera: A variation of the Irish name Ciara, to reflect her Irish mother’s heritage.

Milla: A Slavic name to recognise her Croatian grandfather’s background.

Ezie (Milla’s brother): Mother saw the name on another child, and liked it.

Omer: Chosen for her father’s Israeli background.

Brooke: Her mother always liked the name.

Henry: Chosen to reflect his father’s English heritage.

More participants are needed, and Australians may participate by taking the survey here.

There aren’t many Australian studies done on baby names, so I am happy to publicise this one. I have done the survey myself, and it only takes about 10-15 minutes, and does give you the opportunity to share your own “name story” – it’s not just ticking boxes. I hope any Australian parent reading this will take part.

Famous Name: Roald

14 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

famous namesakes, locational names, nicknames, Nook of Names, Norwegian names, Old Norse names, surname names, Viking names

March 7 this year marked the centenary of an important event in history. One hundred years ago on this date, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen sailed into Hobart, having led the expedition which first reached the geographic South Pole, on December 14 1911.

You would think that such an achievement would be greeted with parades and brass bands as they disembarked, and the men of the expedition would be celebrating with wine, women and song. However, Amundsen and his crew behaved very mysteriously. The men remained on board their ship, the Fram, while Amundsen posed as an ordinary sailor, and booked himself into Hadley’s Hotel, where they gave him a crummy room and treated him like a tramp.

Roald Amundsen sent coded telegrams of his feat to his brother and the King of Norway, but had to maintain his silence. Under the terms of several media deals he had made, he couldn’t go public until the contracted newspapers in London, Paris, Berlin and Oslo had published their exclusive stories.

On March 10 he broke his silence, and the Hobart media learned to their chagrin that the biggest story in the world had been right under their noses, and they’d been pipped at the post by the European papers. The hotel suddenly couldn’t do enough for their guest.

Tasmania has always had a special relationship with Antarctica, being the last port of call before you reach the frozen wastes, and Hobart was a pivotal part of the great age of Antarctic exploration. Today it is a base for Australian and French supply ships, and the Institute of Marine and Antarctic Research is currently under construction on the city’s waterfront.

To celebrate Amundsen’s centennial, last weekend the city of Hobart re-enacted the historic moment that the Norwegian explorer sent that vital telegram, ending with the unveiling of a commemorative plaque at the General Post Office from whence the telegram was first sent. There was also a Huskies Picnic, with husky displays, and other Amundsen-related fun.

Roald is the modern form of the Old Norse name Hróðvaldr or Hróaldr, meaning “famous ruler”. These Viking names seem to turn up in the historical records fairly frequently, and a nobleman named Hróaldr is said to have been one of the first Norse settlers in Iceland. According to Kay at Nook of Names, it is one of the possible origins for the English surname Rowett, and it is also behind the English surname Rolston. Roald is a place name in Norway.

This name is quite familiar to most people because of the author Roald Dahl, who was born in Wales to Norwegian parents, and named after the polar explorer, Roald Amundsen. Although Roald Dahl wrote adult fiction, he is best known and loved for his children’s books, which have become modern classics.

Titles such as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Matilda, The Witches, James and the Giant Peach, and Fantastic Mr Fox have been enjoyed by children as both books and movies. There are very few children who are not delighted by the dark comedy of Mr Dahl’s storytelling; some of them may be heartened to learn that Roald Dahl was only an average student at school, and considered an atrocious writer.

I think this name sounds very strong and even heroic (Roald Dahl himself was a World War II fighter ace). The pronunciation is a slight issue, because the Norwegian way to say it is ROO-all, but the English way is ROE-ald. Either way, there is a danger of it becoming slurred into the word rule or rolled. You get a very Australian nickname, Roo, from the Norwegian pronunciation.

Whether you would like to honour a polar explorer, a popular author, Norwegian heritage, Viking ancestry, or a connection with Antarctic research, Roald seems an excellent and unusual choice.

(The photo is of Amundsen with his crew on board the Fram; he is the one in the middle wearing a bowler hat. The photo is held by the Nasjonalbiblioteket in Oslo).

Ruby and Oliver – #1 in Tasmania

13 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on Ruby and Oliver – #1 in Tasmania

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity names, classic names, Irish names, name popularity, name trends, nicknames, popular names, royal baby names, Scottish names, surname names

I’ve been waiting for the top boy and girls to repeat for a state, and at last they have – Tasmania shares its #1 boy and girl names with South Australia.

On the girls’ Top 10 20, Ruby continues to sparkle at #1, and in fact has increased her lead. In 2010, she was used eight more times than the #2 name; last year there were almost twice as many babies named Ruby as the next name down.

The name that increased the most in popularity was Ava, rising ten places from #13 to #3. Amelia and Olivia were not far behind, and Zoe and Sophie made modest rises.

The name falling the most was Mia, going down from #5 to #10; surprising when you think how well she did in other states. Other names decreasing in popularity were Ella, Isabella, Bella, Holly and Chloe.

Grace, Charlotte, Matilda, Emily, Lily, Isabelle and Evie were stable, and Lucy and Imogen didn’t change position.

New to the Top 20 were Stella, Layla, Lilly, Sophia, Hannah, Isla, Sienna, Phoebe and Ellie. Departed were Hayley, Molly, Georgia, Maddison and Paige.

On the boys’ Top 20, Oliver joined Ruby by remaining the #1 name for another year.

Henry went up the most, increasing his position nine places from #17 to #8. Also rising were Samuel, Ethan, Lucas and Xavier.

Tyler plummeted twelve places from #7 to #19, and Harry, Max, Lachlan, James, Charlie, Jack, Thomas and Riley also had significant losses.

Jacob, Cooper, Alexander, Angus, Archie and Oscar remained stable, while William, Noah and Connor didn’t change their position.

I based names’ position on their overall number of uses, as there were so many names sharing position. One of the anomalies of this system is that although there were no new names in the boys’ Top 20, it lost twenty-two names: Joshua, Liam, Logan, Benjamin, Isaac, Ryan, Bailey, Jackson, Mitchell, Hamish, Blake, Jordan, Sebastian, Hunter, Lincoln, Jake, Aiden, Jesse, Zachary, Harrison, Eli and Daniel.

A smaller population obviously leads to much greater volatility, and probably a few rather odd results.

Tasmania definitely has its own style of naming, with more cosy older-style names such as Olive, Esther, Eleanor, Florence, Elsie, Maggie and Meg on the full girls’ list, and a dizzying array of spelling variants. Incidentally, I note that Halle, which was a unique name in 2010, was used six times in 2011 – enough to get it onto the Top 100.

On the boys’ list, surname names seem more prevalent than usual, as well as Scottish and Irish names like Campbell and Rory, and short forms like Tom and Billy. Classic Robert can also be found on the Tasmanian Top 100. The number of babies named Flynn went from 9 to 15, putting it into the Top 100, while Tasmanians seemed immune to the charms of Harper and Savannah.

You can see the spreadsheet with exact numbers of each name at the Links to Name Data page.

 

Top 116 Baby Girl Names in Tasmania for 2011

13 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name popularity, popular names

  1. Ruby
  2. Amelia
  3. Ava
  4. Grace
  5. Charlotte
  6. Sophie
  7. Olivia
  8. Ella
  9. Chloe
  10. Isabella
  11. Matilda
  12. Emily
  13. Lily
  14. Mia
  15. Lucy
  16. Zoe
  17. Stella
  18. Layla
  19. Isabelle
  20. Lilly
  21. Sophia
  22. Hannah
  23. Isla
  24. Imogen
  25. Evie
  26. Bella
  27. Sienna
  28. Phoebe
  29. Holly
  30. Ellie
  31. Violet
  32. Molly
  33. Ebony
  34. Scarlett
  35. Paige
  36. Poppy
  37. Isabel
  38. Millie
  39. Hayley
  40. Eva
  41. Georgia
  42. Milla
  43. Indy
  44. April
  45. Abigail
  46. Sarah
  47. Jessica
  48. Willow
  49. Nina
  50. Taylor
  51. Eleanor
  52. Abbie
  53. Eliza
  54. Chelsea
  55. Summer
  56. Annabelle
  57. Mackenzie
  58. Addison
  59. Alice
  60. Charli
  61. Emma
  62. Ivy
  63. Madison
  64. Claire
  65. Rubi
  66. Izabella
  67. Indiana
  68. Elsie
  69. Olive
  70. Indianna
  71. Elizabeth
  72. Alexis
  73. Rachel
  74. Josie
  75. Maddison
  76. Bonnie
  77. Kate
  78. Lola
  79. Madeline
  80. Asha
  81. Heidi
  82. Esther
  83. Charlie
  84. Jorja
  85. Maya
  86. Anna
  87. Gabrielle
  88. Jasmine
  89. Taylah
  90. Meg
  91. Halle
  92. Aaliyah
  93. Gracie
  94. Lillian
  95. Leah
  96. Elsa
  97. Isobel
  98. Harmony
  99. Freya
  100. Maggie
  101. Sofia
  102. Lucinda
  103. Indi
  104. Florence
  105. Lara
  106. Kiara
  107. Amber
  108. Kayla
  109. Amy
  110. Audrey
  111. Lacey
  112. Zara
  113. Tayla
  114. Stephanie
  115. Alyssa
  116. Peyton

If 116 seems a slightly strange number, it’s because so many names shared positions that quite a number of them were in last place. You can see the spreadsheet with the exact numbers for each name at the Links to Name Data page.

Top 100 Baby Boy Names in Tasmania for 2011

13 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on Top 100 Baby Boy Names in Tasmania for 2011

Tags

name popularity, popular names

  1. Oliver
  2. Lucas
  3. William
  4. Noah
  5. Samuel
  6. Xavier
  7. Ethan
  8. Thomas
  9. Henry
  10. Jack
  11. Riley
  12. Charlie
  13. Jacob
  14. Cooper
  15. Alexander
  16. James
  17. Angus
  18. Lachlan
  19. Archie
  20. Tyler
  21. Max
  22. Harry
  23. Connor
  24. Oscar
  25. Mason
  26. Liam
  27. Levi
  28. Bailey
  29. Harrison
  30. Toby
  31. Ryan
  32. Isaac
  33. Jake
  34. Hamish
  35. Benjamin
  36. Joshua
  37. Blake
  38. Hunter
  39. Jayden
  40. Caleb
  41. Nate
  42. Jordan
  43. Brock
  44. Logan
  45. George
  46. Lewis
  47. Eli
  48. Jackson
  49. Flynn
  50. Declan
  51. Bradley
  52. Ryder
  53. Mitchell
  54. Finn
  55. Darcy
  56. Matthew
  57. Edward
  58. Hugo
  59. Chase
  60. Xander
  61. Jett
  62. Elijah
  63. Sebastian
  64. Archer
  65. Campbell
  66. Leo
  67. Luke
  68. Christopher
  69. Seth
  70. Harley
  71. Callum
  72. Michael
  73. Daniel
  74. Alex
  75. Billy
  76. Andrew
  77. Jesse
  78. Joseph
  79. Jasper
  80. Patrick
  81. Tyson
  82. Ashton
  83. Owen
  84. Rory
  85. Hugh
  86. Rhys
  87. Sam
  88. Reuben
  89. Dylan
  90. Brodie
  91. Aiden
  92. Zachary
  93. Cohen
  94. Nicholas
  95. Jaxon
  96. Lincoln
  97. Tom
  98. Dominic
  99. Robert
  100. Hayden

You can see the spreadsheet at the Links to Name Data page, which includes exact numbers for each name.

Celebrity Baby News: Ali Carle and Matt Clarke

13 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Radio presenter Ali Carle, and her partner, Matt Clarke, recently welcomed their son Samuel Fletcher. Samuel joins big sister Eloise Harper, who is two years old. Children naming their siblings is the new celebrity fad, but Eloise’s suggestion of Elmo for the name of her baby brother was firmly quashed.

Ali is one of the hosts of Triple M’s The Hot Breakfast; she also appears on Channel 9 News, writes a sports column for the Adelaide Advertiser, and is a reporter on Channel 9’s travel show, Postcards.

Matt is a former AFL football player who played for the Adelaide Crows; he retired in 2007. Matt is a qualified veterinarian, and is currently ruck coach at the Crows while studying for his MBA.

(Photo of Samuel, below, from the Triple M website).

Celebrity Baby News: Jarrod and Briony Lyle

12 Monday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

Golfer Jarrod Lyle, and his wife Briony, welcomed their first child on March 10, and have named their new daughter Lusi Joy. Lusi Lyle was born at a hospital in Shepparton, Victoria at 11.19 pm, weighing 3.6 kg (7 pounds 13 ounces).

Jarrod is from the regional city of Shepparton, and began playing golf at the age of six. He turned professional in 2004, and won the Mexican Open and the Knoxville Open in 2008. He scored a hole-in-one at the Waste Management Phoenix Open in 2011, winning $25 000 for charity. It was the first time anyone had got a hole-in-one at the 16th on that course for nine years.

Briony (nee Harper) is also from Shepparton. Jarrod and Briony were married in the backyard of Jarrod’s grandparents in Shepparton in December last year.

Last week, Jarrod was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia after he sought treatment for an infection contracted from an insect bite while he was playing in Mexico. Lusi’s birth was induced so that he could spent time with her before being driven to Melbourne to begin four months of chemotherapy and bone marrow transplants.

This is Jarrod’s second bout of leukaemia – at the age of 17 he was diagnosed with the same disease, and spent nine months in bed while undergoing chemotherapy. Doctors told him that his fertility could be affected by the treatment he underwent, so was thrilled when Briony became pregnant. The papers are assuming that Lusi’s name is based on the “light and joy” she is bringing into their lives.

Jarrod’s manager reports that he is in good spirits and pretty resilient. Messages of support, and congratulations on the birth of Lusi, have been flooding in to the popular golfer known for his sense of fun, and we can only add to them by wishing Jarrod a speedy recovery and the best of health.

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