Saskia and Livia: Birth Announcements from the “Canberra Times” (January)

Tags

, ,

Twins

Cameron Leslie and Daniel John (Jack)

 

Girls

Elbe Souad (Azim, Mae)

Indira Lee

Livia Mae

Macaela Ruby Isobelle

Phoebe Elizabeth Rose

Quinn Julie Tracy

Rory Joe Anne

Saskia Isis

Serena Ariana

Tahlia Jazmyne (Mekhai)

 

Boys

Angus Jed

Blake Darcy (Brady)

Cadel Gareth

Caleb Andrew (Eilah, Noah)

Drew Morgan (Coen)

Hudson James

Jack Brian Jeffrey (Ella)

Lachlan Kevin

Orlando Vittorino

Tate Gordon Phillip (Taylah)

Ottilia Antoinette: Birth Announcements from the Brisbane “Courier Mail” (December/January)

Tags

,

Girls

Bronte Elizabeth (Zara)

Chloe Anneliese (Michaela, Jaida)

Emme Rebecca (Allara)

Jeda Kate Mabel

Lucy Nerida

Maggie Florence (Olivia, Ruby)

Ottilia Antoinette (Jacqui, Bronte, Gabi, Chelsea)

Regan Gabrielle (Peyton)

Summer Mary-Rose

Verity April

 

Boys

Ari Graham

Eli Hunter Nichol (Phoebe)

Hugo Neville

Jamie Charles Robertson

Levi Jay (Charlie)

Nate Jack James (Dax)

Nicholas Stephen (Genevieve)

Sam Cary

Seamus Geoffrey (Tiernan, Michael, Finbar)

Storm Zachary

Bodhi and Zane: Birth Announcements from Sydney’s Southern and Outer Suburbs (December/January)

Tags

,

Girls

Annabelle Shea (Aiden)

Chloe Julia (Billy)

Claudia Janice

Evie Dale (Myah)

Lana Sharee

Lillian Grace “Lilly” (Liam)

Mary Alanah (Josephine)

Matilda Susan

Phoebe Jane

Violet Nancy

 

Boys

Bodhi Lennox (Jett, Mason)

Braxton Paul (Talen, River)

Dante Perry

Finn Joseph Miro (Sophia)

Jack James Joseph (Samuel)

Jordan William Peter

Noah Harley (Boadie)

Reece Vance (Blake)

Tate Taylor (Bryn, Leira)

Zane Bowman (Taj)

Top Baby Names from Regional Victoria for 2011

Tags

, ,

Have you ever noticed that the official name data for your state or territory doesn’t always tally with your own experiences? Perhaps overall there were more baby girls named Mia in your state than anything else, and yet in your own town, every second person seems to be calling their new baby Ava, or Scarlett. You might even pick a name much further down the rankings, such as Jett, but when you rock up to the first day of kindy, there’s four other boys named Jett in your son’s class (plus two named Jhett).

If you’re interested in name popularity, it helps to keep a weather eye on the local conditions. The easiest way to do this is to read the birth announcements in your local paper, which is where the information on these towns and regional centres came from.

GEELONG

Boys

1. Oliver (#3)

2. William (#2)

3. Charlie (#18)

4. Harry (#19)

5. Archie (#37)

6. Xavier (#13)

7. Jack (#1)

8. Noah (#5)

9. James (#7)

10. Cooper (#11) and Oscar (#20)

Girls

1. Amelia (#8)

2. Olivia (#3)

3. Mia (#1)

4. Sophie (#11)

5. Chloe (#4)

6. Ruby (#2)

7. Matilda (#16)

8. Sienna (#7)

9. Willow (#39

10. Ella (#9), Emily (#12), Evie (#24), Milla (#35) and Zoe (#15)

BALLARAT [pictured]

A lady named Ruth Matthews has been collating name data from birth notices in “The Courier” since 1964, after the birth of her first child. Trends she has noticed include a wider pool of names (107 names for boys in 1965, compared to 235 in 2011), variant spellings of popular names, and unisex names. Mrs Matthews counts similar names as one.

Boys

1. Cooper (#11)

2. Harry (#19) or Harrison (#29)

3. Jack (#1) or Jackson (#30)

4. Oliver (#3), Will (-) or William (#2)

5. Thomas (#6) or Tom (-)

6. James (#7)

7. Max (#14) or Maxwell (-), Xavier (#13)

8. Lachlan (#10)

Girls

1. Ruby (#2)

2. Charlotte (#5), Lily (#10)

3. Mia (#1)

4. Grace (#14) or Gracie (-), Lucy (#17), Maddison (#43)

5. Isabella (#6), Olivia (#3)

6. Olive (#82), Chloe (#4), Evie (#24), Matilda (#16), Sophie (#11)

7. Addison (#54), Annabelle (#50), Chelsea (#38), Ella (#9), Emily (#12), Sienna (#7)

THE SOUTH-WEST REGION

They collated their names even more vaguely, counting Ava and Eva as the same name, as well as Pippa and Piper.

Boys

1. Harry (#19)
2. Charlie (#18), Oliver (#3), Thomas/Tom/Tommy/Tommie (#6)
3. Archie (#37)
4. Cooper (#11), Harrison (#29), Lewis/Louis (#96), William/Will/Wil (#2)
5. Harvey (#66), Lachlan (#10)

Girls

1. Isabelle/Isabel/Isobel/Isabella/Bella (#26/46/-/6/88)
2. Ava/Eva (#12/27), Grace (#14)
3. Emily (#12), Madison/Maddison (#30/43), Mia (#1), Zoe (#15)
4. Amelia/Amellia/Amalia (#8), Charlotte (#5), Pippa/Piper (-/#75), Sophie (#11)

Another way to keep track of local baby names is to contact the local hospital in your area, to see if someone makes a public record of the most popular baby names.

At Bacchus Marsh and Melton Regional Hospital, just outside Melbourne, the most popular name for girls was Ruby, and the most popular name for boys was either Lachlan or Ryan. Other popular girls names were Isabelle, Lilly, Olivia, Sienna, Zoe, Amelia, Ava, Ellie, Hayley and Matilda, and for the boys, it was Cooper, Jack, Thomas and Tyler. In Bacchus Marsh, Xavier, Jaxon and Ryder are considered unusual names.

Famous Names: Ita and Cleo

Tags

, , , , , , ,

The Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts was established last year as a subsidiary of the Australian Film Institute; its job is to administer the AACTA Awards, which replace the old AFI Awards. Every news report on television seemed to feel it necessary to point out that AACTA is said just like the word actor, which I think most of us would have understood without help, seeing as they just said it aloud to us.

The Australian Academy has been deliberately set up in a similar way to the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and the awards ceremony has been moved to late January, in order to fit in with the prize-giving season in the United States, which holds the Golden Globes and the Academy Awards in January and February. The AACTA Awards ceremony has been moved to Sydney and held at the Opera House, possibly because that seems more Hollywood than Melbourne. The AACTA statuette has also been remodelled, with some commenting that it looks like a flamboyant Australian Oscar.

Amongst the prize-winners was Asher Keddie, who won the Switched on Audience Choice Award for Best Performance in a Television Drama, for her role as Ita Buttrose in the mini-series Paper Giants: The Birth of Cleo. I must confess to not voting in this contest, or even knowing it existed until too late (obviously I’m not a very switched on audience member), but I do approve of the choice, as I thought Ms Keddie did an excellent job of portraying famous editor, Ms Buttrose.

Ita Buttrose, like Barry Humphries and Father Bob, is another super septuagenarian. She was named after her maternal grandmother, Ita Clare Rodgers (nee Rosenthal). Her ambition since the age of 11 was to be a journalist, and she began working as a copy girl at 15. Ita was a force in the Australian media for many years, including as youngest editor of The Australian Woman’s Weekly, the largest magazine in Australia. She became the first woman to edit a major metropolitan newspaper, the Daily Telegraph. Always perfectly presented, cultured and refined, she is instantly recognisable for her trademark lisp. She’s been granted several awards and honours, and supports a multitude of causes, from AIDS to Alzheimer’s. Ita is also an author of many practical books; her latest is a guide to etiquette.

Ita (IE-ta) is an Anglicisation of the Irish name Íte (EE-ta). Saint Ita of Killeedy was a 6th century Irish nun who headed a community of women. One of their tasks was to run a school for small boys; among her students was Saint Brendan the Navigator. According to tradition, Ita was of royal blood and baptised Deirdre; the name Ita she chose herself from the Old Irish word ítu, “thirst”. This was to signify her thirst for divine goodness. Today it sounds mildly vampiric.

Ita Buttrose became the founding editor of Cleo magazine in 1972, and made it an instant success – the first edition sold out in two days. Cleo was something new in Australian publishing: a magazine for women that spoke openly about sexuality. There were articles on masturbation, abortion, contraception and sex toys, and a nude centrefold – the first model for the centrefold was actor Jack Thompson. It made the sexual revolution accessible to the average woman. In Paper Giants, the title Cleopatra is suggested for the magazine, as befitting a strong yet sexual woman, but Cleo is chosen because it fits better on the masthead. It intrigues me that Cleo sounds similar to Ita’s middle name – Clare – and wonder whether she unconsciously selected a title that sounded like her own name. Cleo is also the name of Ita’s pet dog (Clare is her grand-daughter).

Cleo is usually thought of as being a short form of Cleopatra, but it can be short for any name beginning with Cleo-, such as Cleophas. It is therefore a unisex name, and there are several prominent men named Cleo, including American motorcyclist and World War I flying ace Cleo Pineau. The father of Elizabeth Short, the Black Dahlia murder victim, was named Cleo. It is from the Greek for “glory, fame, pride”. This gorgeous little name is right on trend for o-enders, and was also a celebrity baby name last year. It would make a great alternative to popular Chloe.

Ruby and Oliver – #1 in South Australia

Tags

, ,

On the girls’ chart, Ruby went up two places to make #1, while Ella, #1 for 2010, sunk ten places.

The biggest riser was Sophie, going up six places, and Scarlett also rose up the ranks. Chloe and Lily both dropped three places, so it seemed as if S names became more popular, while names with a strong L, ending with an -ee sound were failing.

Remaining stable (not changing more than two places) were Mia, Emily, Isabella, Olivia, Ava, Grace and Hannah. Charlotte, Sienna, Amelia and Zoe didn’t budge at all.

Jessica, Lucy and Lilly dropped out of the Top 20; in the case of the last two, it does seem that the L-sound names have had their day.

Replacing them were three names returning to the Top 20 – Matilda and Emma, last seen in 2009; and Madison, last seen in 2008. In fact, there was a real feeling of “more of the same please” from the girls Top 20.

On the boys’ Top 20, there was a bit more colour and movement. Oliver went up four places to reach #1, while Jack was nudged down from the top spot to #2.

Tyler was the big success story, shooting up eleven places, and Ethan, Noah, Liam and Jacob also made significant gains.

Joshua dropped a massive fourteen places, and Riley, Lachlan, James and Samuel also fell down the charts. I do think that Riley is gradually being replaced by other surname-y boys’ names.

William, Lucas, Max, Thomas, Charlie, Cooper and Alexander remained steady, with little change.

There was only one new name on the boys’ chart, but unlike the girls’, this one was genuinely new to the Top 20 – Blake. As in other states, Harry dropped out of the Top 20; this does seem to be one name which we will be seeing less often.

As in other states, Flynn did well, joining the Top 100 for the first time. However, while Charlie was Top 100 for both boys and girls in Victoria and the ACT, in South Australia Charlie remains a boys’ name, with Charli still the preferred spelling on the girls’ chart.

As in other states, there was a noticeable trend for girls’ names to remain relatively stable, while boys’ names were more likely to experience changes in popularity. This goes against conventional wisdom that parents tend to be conservative with naming boys, sticking to the same old names year after year, while girls’ names are prone to fickle fashion. Maybe it’s about time some of the other conventional wisdoms about gender in names gets a rethink?

 

Top 100 Baby Boy Names in South Australia for 2011

Tags

, ,

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

Top 100 Baby Girl Names in South Australia for 2011

Tags

, ,

  1. Ruby
  2. Charlotte
  3. Sophie
  4. Mia
  5. Emily
  6. Isabella
  7. Chloe
  8. Olivia
  9. Lily
  10. Ella
  11. Sienna
  12. Ava
  13. Grace
  14. Amelia
  15. Zoe
  16. Scarlett
  17. Matilda
  18. Madison
  19. Hannah
  20. Emma
  21. Lucy
  22. Isla
  23. Isabelle
  24. Jasmine
  25. Sophia
  26. Maddison
  27. Imogen
  28. Georgia
  29. Eva
  30. Jessica
  31. Lilly
  32. Evie
  33. Summer
  34. Chelsea
  35. Zara
  36. Amber
  37. Layla
  38. Abigail
  39. Ellie
  40. Alexis
  41. Claire
  42. Jade
  43. Eliza
  44. Mackenzie
  45. Stella
  46. Ivy
  47. Tahlia
  48. Piper
  49. Amelie
  50. Sarah
  51. Lara
  52. Holly
  53. Evelyn
  54. Annabelle
  55. Willow
  56. Sofia
  57. Paige
  58. Haley
  59. Harper
  60. Caitlin
  61. Alice
  62. Addison
  63. Maya
  64. Lola
  65. Bethany
  66. Savannah
  67. Mikayla
  68. Indiana
  69. Bella
  70. April
  71. Poppy
  72. Elise
  73. Violet
  74. Charli
  75. Alyssa
  76. Alana
  77. Rose
  78. Molly
  79. Leila
  80. Lauren
  81. Kayla
  82. Ebony
  83. Daisy
  84. Anna
  85. Tayla
  86. Isabel
  87. Elizabeth
  88. Ayla
  89. Asha
  90. Amy
  91. Taylor
  92. Stephanie
  93. Makayla
  94. Lila
  95. Kiara
  96. Gracie
  97. Emilia
  98. Aaliyah
  99. Rachel
  100. Peyton

Celebrity Baby News: Geoff and Sara Huegill

Tags

, ,

Champion swimmer Geoff Huegill, and his wife Sara, welcomed their first child on January 20; a daughter named Mila.

Geoff Huegill established himself as one of the world’s great butterfly competitors, winning bronze and silver at the 2000 Summer Olympics, and winning seven gold medals at various Commonwealth Games. He has won 28 international medals, been world champion five times and set eight world records. In 2005, Geoff announced his retirement from swimming, after battling with his weight and failing to qualify for the Australian team. Retirement sent him into a deep depression, which he tried to deal with through drugs, alcohol and junk food. In 2008, he announced his comeback, having shed 40 kg (88 pounds) in readiness. By 2010, he had already won a national medal and won the Australian title. He went on to win an international medal, and then took two gold medals at the Delhi Commonwealth Games. He plans to compete at the London Olympics this year.

Sara Huegill, nee Hills, was in PR at a major fashion firm prior to her marriage, and has her own fashion blog. She and Geoff were married in Bali in April last year. Geoff credits his comeback to Sara’s support.

Mila is a pet form of Slavic names with mil in them, meaning “gracious, dear”. It’s fast becoming a fashionable favourite that sounds similar to popular Milla.

(Full story and photos in this week’s New Idea magazine).

Brittania Rules at British Baby Names

Tags

, , ,

As the summer holidays wane and the new school year opens, it seems appropriate that I should be reviewing a blog written by a schoolteacher.

I “met” British Baby Names through Mer de Noms, which has it listed on its Blog Roll. I was impressed by the official-sounding title and the quiet confidence it denoted (I did consider calling my blog Australian Baby Names, but wasn’t sure I could live up to it). For some time I thought BBN was the net presence of a book, magazine, or a company of some kind. I kept waiting to be sold something, and although that hasn’t happened yet, it does make me secretly wonder if a book, magazine, company, or product are in the pipeline.

The subtitle to British Baby Names is Trends, Styles and Quirks, and the trend-analysing, stylish, and quirky blogger behind British Baby Names is Elea (a homophone of Ella). Elea is from Coventry, an English city you may connect with Lady Godiva; like her compatriot Lou at Mer de Noms, she comes from Britain’s heartland. This part of the world clearly breeds fabulous name bloggers.

What do you expect from a blog on British baby names? Perhaps you think of the elegant and slightly over-the-top names from the birth announcements in The Telegraph. Or maybe you think of medieval names, or glorious Victoriana. You might want to know which names are currently popular in England, Wales and Scotland, or seek name data from previous centuries. You could be interested in Celtic and Gaelic names, or drawn to names from English literature.

So often are our expectations disappointed, and yet at British Baby Names, you get all this, and more. Let’s run through some of the goodies on offer.

Name Lists

I urge you to check out Styles, which divides names into useful “style codes” that Elea has devised. Thus we have such intriguingly-named lists as Upright Elegance, Resonant Roman, and Funky Clunky. If you like a name on one of the lists, chances are you will find yourself approving several others in that style.

The Themes list allows Elea a chance to do some research, and use her imagination. Here you may find lists of Gods and Goddesses, Non-Floral Nature vocabulary names, and scientific Butterfly Names. I feel that some of the Meaning lists, which includes flowers, colours and birds, could sit comfortably under Themes as well.

British society embraces many cultures, and at Cultural Origins we have lists such as Cornish, Manx and Scottish Clan names, but also French and Arabic ones. Surely a list on Indian names is coming …

There are also lists of literary characters, and names of British and European royalty. Just started this year are names connected with each month – I’m looking forward to seeing this series unfold.

Names of the week

Elea adds a fresh name each Saturday, alternating between genders, and there are currently 36 names. Each listing gives the origin, usage, namesakes, variants and pronunciation. There are also middle name suggestions, sibset suggestions and nickname suggestions. Each name is placed in the context of different name style lists, and suggests names in similar styles. These appear accurate, judging by own reactions; however, I seem to like all the names and all the different name styles, so I may not be the best test candidate.

Name Data

A name nerd’s dream – lots and lots of lovely name data! You can see the Top 100 for each decade beginning in 1904 (I’m not sure it’s ever explained why it starts in 1904), comparing each name’s rank with that of 2009. So we can see that some of the “great grandparent” names are popular now, such as Ruby, Isabella, William and Matthew, but inexplicably, equally nice names like Sylvia, Audrey, Edmund and Harold don’t seem to be cutting it (especially odd as Audrey is Top 100 here and in North America).

There’s also the current Top 100 for both England/Wales and Scotland. Along the left hand side, you can go straight to the combined spellings for girls and boys, hyphenated names, and also name combinations from the century-ago 1911 census for more spiffing middle name ideas.

There are Categories to choose from down the right-hand side – one of the most interesting and useful is Sibling Names, which looks through the historical name data to see which sibling names were chosen to “go with” names as varied as Cinderella, Erastus and Ivanhoe.

Another of my favourites is the T’was Ever Thus series, in which we see that there is nothing new under the sun. I’m sure these cross old newspaper writers are the direct ancestors of people who peevishly air their pet name grievances on the Internet. Here we see one from 1900, bringing out that ancient chestnut, that children will be horribly bullied if called something outlandish, such as Angelina.

Elea has been blogging industriously for almost a year, passing her 200th blog post around last Christmas. British Baby Names is powered by Typepad, a platform which produces very sleek and professional-looking blogs. Leaving comments is easy, as there are so many different ways to sign in, and you don’t need to respond to a captcha each time you comment on a post. Elea is very good at answering her comments in timely fashion too.

If you would like to follow BBN on Twitter or Facebook, there are two easy-find buttons to press, and you’re there. These do seem to be used differently – Twitter is for receiving notice of blog updates, while Facebook is for chatting and getting interesting snippets of name information which don’t get blogged about. You can subscribe to the live feed by clicking on the tiny orange RSS symbol displayed when you open each Category.

Elea has recently had a change of image, giving BBN a classic monochrome background with discreet polka dots, and featuring an old-fashioned perambulator, such as a trim little nanny may have nimbled around a London park at the turn of the last century.

Everything is perfectly organised, beautifully presented, and meticulously researched. I have to restrain myself from picturing her classroom as pin-neat with clearly written charts on the walls, and children with very clean faces sitting at desks arranged in an orderly fashion. Her report card gets an A+ with lots of gold stars and elephant stamps.

There is a definite English “style” on British Baby Names that I think Anglophiles will find extremely charming. It’s everything we expect from “proper British names” – whether they be elegant as a white glove, wild as a moor in a Bronte novel, or eccentric as a Hyde park speaker.

A little known fact about Elea is that she has a romantic connection to Australia, and it’s not beyond the bounds of possibility that this English lass with the love of field and coppice running in her veins will one day make her home in our wide brown land. Should this occur, I have no doubt that she will in short order produce a blog called Australian Baby Names as perfect, beautiful, and meticulous as BBN. I couldn’t hope to be put out of business by a better blogger.

Q & A with Elea

Name?: Eleanor Lauren Margaret. The first two were already on my parent’s short-list, when my great-grandmother, Margaret, died a few months before I was born. I was given Margaret to honour her.

Name you would like to have: I’ve always been happy with my first name as it is classic, hard to date, and has lots of nicknames. I considered having Lauren removed and just being Eleanor Margaret. My reasoning was that Margaret has family significance, while Lauren just felt like a run-of-the-mill 1980s name. Having three middle names never bothered me, but it used to annoy me when the last one would get chopped off on forms – leaving me with just Lauren, my least favourite middle. Being simply Eleanor Margaret, or Eleanor Margaret Lauren, would, I felt, have solved that problem. I once mentioned to my parents that I wished Lauren wasn’t one of my names and they looked rather shocked, replying, “But I love Lauren.” Seeing that they both genuinely loved the name restored my feeling of ownership for it.

What began your interest in names?: I remember choosing Barbie dolls and Polly Pockets based on their names alone, and looking avidly at the names on the Edwardian-style figurines in the Argos catalogues. Around the age of 8, I named an imaginary [future] daughter Aurora Ariel Belinda Liesl Fenella Esme Roberta – all names from favourite books and films. By the time I realised names had meanings, I was hooked.

How did you start blogging?: For many years I have enjoyed researching names in historical sources or picking through the official statistics. (I seem to have a thing for name related spreadsheets ). I used to post various findings on different forums, but then would spend ages trying to find them again when I needed to refer to them. Eventually, I started to catalogue some of the posts, and the idea of a blog really grew from there – mostly as a place to store my general musings (which probably explains why the content bounces all over the place with no real set theme). It staggers me that people actually read the posts, let alone make time to comment. For so long my name obsession has been my closeted secret.

Your favourite blog entry on British Baby Names: My posts tend to range from familiar subjects that I want to indulge in, to topics I have only just discovered and am desperate to explore. The post on Victorian floriography is a good example of the latter. It was something that I had only been vaguely aware of, but once I started researching I became fascinated. As far as serials go, I very much enjoy writing the Names of the Week, and researching the Finds from… entries.

Your pet naming peeve: I’m always saddened when people tell me that they were given their name/middle name because their parents “couldn’t think of anything else/couldn’t agree so they compromised on something they didn’t hate/didn’t bother to give a middle name because they ran out of ideas after naming the older ones.” I’ve heard all these before, and, sadly, it is usually these people who dislike their name. Mostly, because they feel the name was chosen with very little thought, sentiment, or care.

I also find it unsettling that Dylan for a girl is acceptable, but Evelyn for a boy is considered cruel. I have no problem with gender-bending, but I find it sad that our society only swings it one way.

Your favourite names: I have a particular passion for Celtic, Greek and medieval names. The favourites I’ve been nursing for the past few years are Endelyn and Merewen for girls, and Jago, Macsen and Aidric for boys.

Names you dislike:  The -son names (Madison, Addison, Emerson) for girls. I’m very visual with names so the “son” part always leaps out at me and looks incongruous.

Names you love but can’t use: Persephone was once my favourite guilty pleasure. These days I see it less as guilty, more as actually quite usable. There are certain names that I love but have been used by, or are too close to, family/friends names to use: Livia, Amelia, Charlotte, Sabina, Juliet.

Your future children’s names: There is only one name that I have had semi-set in my mind since I was a teenager – William Rhys. It honours several family members, and I still love how it looks and sounds.

The one piece of advice you would give to someone choosing a name for their baby: My overall advice would be that people choose a name that has some resonance or significance for them. Whether it honours a loved one, has a particularly apt meaning, is a much loved name, or just makes you happy every time you say it, if you love it and find it significant, chances are your child will too.