Twins
Clover Maisie and Remy Joy
Rory Todd and Willow Clare
Girls
Amalia Anndie (Caden)
Annabelle Marilyn (Caitlyn, Tyler, Mikayla)
Avah Skye Debe (Clarissa, Danica)
Billie (Milay-May)
Birdie Beatrix
Charlotte Evelyn Rose
Edith Eliza (Sophie, Annabelle)
Elizabeth Chelvarani
Eriana Jocel
Frances Violet
Gabriela Sheila (Melania)
Hannah Susan Grace
Harlow (London)
Ivy Charlotte (Ned)
Josephine Isobel
Lainey Anne
Neave Olive
Nellie Elizabeth (Pippa)
Phoebe Kaye (Jaynie, Seb, Ella)
Zara Analise
Boys
Archie Flynn (Ruby, Lilly)
Blesses (Ever)
Eli Callan
Freddy Patrick
Heath Corey
Henry Ren
Hunter Glen
Jacob John William (Pip)
Jaxson Zander (Thomas, Tygah)
Jimmy Neale
Kip Alexander (Peggy)
Lachlan Charles Graham (Tristan, Ethan)
Leo Casper
Lexon Reave (Makai)
Oscar George
Rafferty James
Reed Maxwell David
Samuel Emidio (James)
Thomas Eldridge
Wade Trevor
(Picture shows pelicans sleeping on wooden posts in Noosa on the Sunshine Coast; photo from Just Me and My Shadow)
Love Birdie Beatrix!
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Frances Violet and Hannah Susan Grace are my favourites here.
Oh I love the alliteration in the girls names, eg Birdie Beatrix. Was that a ‘thing’ in Victorian times? I seem to remember reading an article about it. Also Remy Joy is lovely. Is Remy short for something usually?
I have seen a lot of English names from Victorian times that are alliterative, but haven’t seen too many in Australian records – maybe the trend didn’t reach us here?
Remy isn’t short for anything, but it’s the French form of the Latin saint’s name Remigius. If you don’t like the idea of a girl with a boy’s name, you can always say Remy is from Remigia, the female form. It’s very common for male saint’s names to be feminised for girls eg Josephine, Acacia, Amanda.
At one point I wanted to call one of our girls Albertine which I love but more so, so I could use nn Birdie. Birdie Beatrix is very cool.