Famous Name: Rebel

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omRebel Wilson seems to be in the papers ever time I open it. Just in the past few weeks, she’s hosted the MTV Awards (and won a couple of them too), attended an official function at the White House, a Vanity Fair party, and a Hollywood première, been chosen to appear in Kung Fu Panda 3, had a glamorous makeover, is tipped to have a sex scene in upcoming Pain & Gain, performed on Late Night, and been interviewed on The View and BET.

Browsing through the headlines, I read that she is funny and wonderful, wows on the red carpet, has captivated audiences everywhere, loves being a gay icon, is now a certified international star, a great dancer and the toast of Hollywood, and it’s a proven scientific fact that she is the greatest living thing on the planet and reviewers wish she could star in every film. I am also reliably informed by some pundit that if you don’t love Rebel Wilson, you’re stupid.

It seems that Rebel has “arrived” in Hollywood, and in the uncertain world of acting, comedy and entertainment, she has gained enough success to be counted as a famous person.

It’s all a long way from her beginnings on Australian television, playing the controlling wife Toula on the SBS comedy Pizza. I could appear very clever by claiming that I always knew that Rebel would make it in Hollywood, but I can’t, because I didn’t. It never crossed my mind, even as I noted that she was a scene-stealer on the show, and by far the funniest thing about the TV special Pizza World.

To be fair, I don’t think anyone else from her early days predicted it either. A maths whiz who went on to study law, she spent a year in South Africa as a Rotary Youth Ambassador. She claims that while suffering hallucinations during a bout of malaria, she saw herself winning an Oscar. After that, she pursued acting, and when she got laughs during a serious performance, realised she had a gift for comedy.

So far, there’s been no Oscar, but she has received an acting scholarship funded by Nicole Kidman, got her big break in Bridesmaids after she wrote and starred in her own TV show, Bogan Pride, and won the MTV Movie Award for Best Breakthrough Performance in Pitch Perfect – past alumni of this award include George Clooney, Jennifer Garner, Isla Fisher and Zac Efron.

Rebel’s parents named her after a girl who sang at their wedding, and Ms Wilson’s siblings are named Ryot, Liberty and Annachi (her brother Ryot and sister Liberty have been contestants on The Amazing Race).

Professional dog showers with a surprisingly conservative streak, the Wilsons gave all their children middle names from English royalty – Rebel’s is after the present queen, and at school she was known as Elizabeth. I recently saw a birth notice for a little Rebel Elizabeth, so maybe this is a name combination which works well.

A rebel is someone who resists or defies authority, often with connotations of doing so violently. The word comes from Old French, and is ultimately from the Latin for “I fight back”.

The name Rebel became much more common in the American southern states after the American Civil War. The soldiers in the Confederate army were known as the Rebels, and personified as Johnny Rebel or Johnny Reb. It could thus be seen as a patriotic name for some Americans, and was given to both sexes, but mostly boys.

In Australia, it appears rarely in the records, mostly in the middle, and is much more common as a girl’s name. There is a female Australian film producer named Rebel Russell-Penfold, and mum Rebel Wylie writes for Kidspot.

Tough baby names like Bandit, Rocket, Blade and Maverick are fashionable, and the classic teen movie Rebel Without a Cause, western TV show The Rebel, and pop song He’s a Rebel give this name a certain retro rockabilly vibe (rebels were clearly a real fad of the 1950s and early ’60s).

Although unisex, it tends to read female in Australia, and the current success of Rebel Wilson only strengthens that. I think it can still work as a boy’s name though – it certainly doesn’t have an ultra-feminine meaning, and The Rebels is a popular name for sports teams, and also a biker club.

If you fancy the idea of having your own little Rebel, it’s a name which is on trend, and a little different without being too strange. The recent success of Rebel Wilson means that most people have heard of it, although some parents may fear that the larger-than-life comedienne could overshadow the name.

POLL RESULT: Rebel received an approval rating of 32%. People saw the name Rebel as unprofessional (19%), ridiculous (17%), and over the top (16%). However, 13% thought it was different and cool. 12% thought Rebel Wilson made the name seem more usable, while 3% were put off the name by the actress.

Name News Round-Up

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NewsThere seems to be a bit of a theme in the name stories I’ve been reading lately, which taps into a struggle to identify whether a name is “normal” or “unusual”.

Hooray for Normal Names

Every time the popular baby names are released, there is always a collective sigh of relief in the media that finally, normal names are back in style again. This strikes me as asinine, because popular names, by their very nature, are always normal. As most parents choose a name from the Top 100, then by definition Top 100 names are “normal” – common, usual, standard, typical, expected.

Apart from the classics, many of our “normal” names weren’t always so normal. Jayden would have been an extremely unusual choice in the 1940s, and Sienna almost unheard of in the 1900s. Meanwhile, Edna is rarely seen today, but in the 1910s it was the #3 name. No doubt some of our current popular names will be curiosities in one hundred years, while some bizarre name choices of today will have become popular. Yet normal names will always be in fashion.

Urban Name Legends

This journalist claims to know a paediatric nurse who tells her all manner of odd baby names. Abcd is plausible enough, and probably not as a weird as she imagines it is. I can believe in Kevin Ice-T quite easily – a mix of classic name up front, quirky name in the middle, which we’ve seen a fair bit of in birth notices. At Eeyore, I’m beginning to feel slightly dubious (I wonder if they misunderstood a name from another culture, such as Ayor. Or Aurore).

Another one she has heard is a baby just named , as in, a comma. Although she says this isn’t a lie, we know it is because that’s not legal in Australia. Same with Cuntley, which would also not be permitted under Australian law, as it contains an obscenity.

A-a (said Adasha) is interesting, because the urban myth is actually that the name is La-a (Ladasha). I’m not sure whether is this some new variation, or if she simply misheard it. It’s amazing how many people say they “know” someone who has met or heard of a La-a, yet these vast numbers never show up in the official data. It’s also interesting that when journalists had access to every single birth registered in Australia and got snarky about them, they did not mention seeing one La-a – a pretty glaring omission if it existed.

It’s a low point for journalism, but even the media will pass on these idiotic myths, giving them greater credibility for the credulous. Let’s just say I will believe in a La-a when I see one, and I will only tell you about it when I have at least some documented evidence to pass on.

Names with Variant Spellings … Too Risky?

When McCrindle released their version of the Australian Top 100, it came with a warning. Mark McCrindle said that if you chose a variant spelling such as Jaxon or Tayla, you risked being seen as unsophisticated, and that you may even harm your child’s career prospects.

This reminded me that when I was a teenager, the advice was that anyone with a tattoo would never get a job – at least, not a “good” job. Today I get served by people with tattoos at most businesses I go to, and my boss (working in a professional-level government position) has a tattoo. It’s hard to predict the future when you assume it will be much like the present.

If variant spellings continue being popular, then they will become so common as to be readily accepted. A future prime minister called Jaxon or Tayla seems just as likely as one called Lucas or Charlotte – after all, perhaps many people would have been surprised in 1950 to be told the Prime Minister of 2010 would be called Julia.

Not So Unusual

When the Daily Mercury in Mackay asked parents to write in to their Facebook page with their children’s unusual names, they received 68 responses. The “unusual” names were ones such as Axl, Caprice, Jakobi, Hudson, Kyan, Denham and Naraya. Although these don’t seem too out there (Typhoon was intriguing), the parents had plenty of people telling them their name choices were unusual. Which makes them unusual enough to suit them.

When most people say they want an unusual name, they don’t want to call their child Faceplant Extractia or Mining-Boom Jazzhands – they just want something that their friends and family haven’t thought of yet. You can’t help wondering what happens when someone else in their community decides on the name Caprice or Axl though … which brings me to the next story.

Stolen Dreams

This article describes the sense of betrayal experienced by Lisa, when her ex-boyfriend Adam married someone else – and had the exact same wedding that Lisa had once dreamed of. Cruelly, Adam and Mrs Adam had also decided on matching Tiffany rings, cocktails at sunset, and a honeymoon in Bora Bora.

Lisa was convinced this was all done as a mockery of her own nuptial dreams, and believed that Adam and his bride had “stolen” her wedding.

Clinical psychologist Amanda Symboluk (whose name must be made up, it’s so perfect for a psychologist) says that Lisa is probably “reading too much into it”, and advises that she (and others in her predicament) shouldn’t “take things personally”.

This reminded me a lot of “baby name stealing” – much as we fondly believe we have chosen a unique name, like Lisa’s dream wedding, it may be more generic than we think. Just as honeymooners tend to gravitate towards Bora Bora rather than Uppsala, parents are more likely to pick the name Scarlett Rose than Lucretia Zixi.

So if you are perturbed to find that someone has already taken that special name you had always dreamed of using, whether it be Odin, Penelope, Dashiell or Juniper, take the advice of Dr. Symboluk – don’t read too much into it, and don’t take it personally.

Celebrity Sibset: Pete Evans

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indexThis year’s series of My Kitchen Rules came to an end last night, so I thought it would be a good opportunity to take a look at the children of the show’s co-host and judge, Pete Evans.

Pete was one of the founders of the famous Hugos Restaurant Group, which over the years won more than thirty awards, including Best Pizza in the World at the American Pizza Challenge in New York City.

Recently, he has stepped away from the restaurants because of his media commitments; he has hosted several cooking shows on television, and hosted Channel Seven cooking contest My Kitchen Rules since 2010. He has also published a line of cook books.

Pete has two daughters with his ex-partner, former competitive ski-er Astrid Ellinger:

Chilli (aged 8)

and

Indii (aged 6)

The story behind Chilli’s name is that she was born not too long after Apple Martin, daughter of Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin. Apparently Pete and Astrid were very impressed with Apple’s food-related name, and felt that they also needed a unique food name for their child. After running through a list of foods-that-could-also-be-names (eg Cinnamon, Saffron), they went with Chilli because it sounded “fiery”.

Late last year, I saw a baby girl named Chilli in a birth notice, and there was also a baby entered in the 2012 Bonds Baby Search with Chilli as her middle name, so Pete and Astrid may have inspired other parents with their spicy name choice.

Waltzing with … May

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eucalyptus-flower-bookIt will be May very soon, and whenever that month comes around, it reminds me of one of my favourite Australian authors from childhood – May Gibbs. Born in England, May grew up in Western Australia, and it was while riding her pony around the bush as a little girl that she began writing stories and drawing pictures based on the native flora.

After going to art school, she became a professional illustrator in the early twentieth century, and was most famed for her “gumnut babies” – plump little cherubs scantily dressed in gumnuts, gumblossom and gumleaves. She even produced postcards of the gumnut babies to support the war effort during WW I, and her house was called Nutcote.

Later she wrote stories to accompany her enchanting drawings, the best-known being the Snugglepot and Cuddlepie series. Adults are charmed by the stories’ sense of fun, but for small children, they are filled with adventure and excitement, and can even be frightening, due to the villains of the story, the wicked Banksia Men. Without being sickly or sentimental, the subtle message of the stories is always that we must care for each other, and for the world around us.

After growing up with May Gibbs’ picture books, it is impossible to walk through the Australian bush and not see it differently; she gave us our own fairy tales and our own mythology of nature. And because many eucalyptus trees flower in autumn (not to mention some banksia species), you can see “gumnut babies” and “banksia men” for yourself in May.

The name May appears to have begun life as a short form of names such as Mary and Margaret, but very soon was associated with the fifth month of the year.

The month of May is generally said to be named by the Romans in honour of the goddess Maia, whose name may mean “greater”. She probably didn’t have a connection to the Greek goddess Maia originally, but the two goddesses became gradually merged into one. Maia was a mother goddess, an earth goddess, and encouraged growth and abundance. May is in the spring in the northern hemisphere, so readily suggests the idea of fecundity.

The poet Ovid said that the month was named for the ancestors, also connected to the word for “greater”; I’m not sure if this was his own idea or one in wide circulation in his day. On the first of May, the Romans sacrificed both to the goddess Maia and to the ancestor spirits who were guardians of the city.

The first of May has quite a history as a day of celebration. In Ireland, it is the Celtic festival of Beltane, which marks the beginning of the summer; this is observed by Neo-Pagans around the world. Related to this is May Day, a European celebration of spring and fertility which often involves dancing around a phallic Maypole decorated in blooms, and choosing a Queen of the May, as if still honouring a spring goddess. In Catholic tradition, the month of May is sacred to the Virgin Mary and the flowering of her spirituality; a continuation of the devotion to floral mother figures.

Another floral connection is the word mayflower, which can refer to several different flowering species, but traditionally is the hawthorn, also known as may, mayblossom, may tree or may thorn. The hawthorn is one of the flowers associated with Beltane, and in Ireland you can make wishes on the maytree during this festival. It is also said that they are inhabited by fairies, especially if you see a lone hawthorn bush out in the wild. To bring us back full circle, hawthorn was sacred to the goddess Maia.

The name May was at its highest popularity in the 1900s, when it was #41 for the decade, and had left the Top 100 by the 1930s. It left the charts entirely between the 1960s and 1980s, but has remained in modest use since the 1990s. Currently it is #557 (11 births) in New South Wales and #489 (10 births) in Victoria.

I should have said in modest use as a first name, because May gets a real workout in the middle position. You can’t read through a few pages of birth notices without seeing name combinations such as Charlotte May, Emma May, Harper May, Pippa May and Zara May – not to mention double names like Gracie-May, Ella-May and Lily-May.

You might say that other names are similarly popular in the middle, such as Elizabeth, Grace and Rose – and Alice is quickly joining their ranks. However, all these names are in the Top 100 and either rising or stable, so they are clearly not being neglected as first names.

Poor May lies in the doldrums, with parents preferring Maya and Mia. Even May’s big sister Mary and anagram twin Amy are much more popular, and April is far more common as a name than the following month.

Yet there is something so simple and sweet about May; it sounds old-fashioned without being the least bit musty. If you would like an underused retro name which still seems fresh and youthful, why not consider rescuing May from the middle, and putting her front, rather than centre?

Name Combinations for May

May Amelia, May Elizabeth, May Kathleen, May Luella, May Sophia, May Victoria

Brothers for May

Charlie, George, Harry, Samuel, Tobias, William

Sisters for May

Alice, Clara, Lillian, Nettie, Rose, Sadie

POLL RESULT: May received an approval rating of 93% – just 1% behind the highest-rated girls name, Layla. 37% of people liked the name May, and 35% loved it.

Girls Name Trends for 2012 – Australia

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Biggest Movers Up

  1. Rose +19
  2. Aria +18 at least
  3. Harper +18
  4. Mila/Milla +16
  5. Heidi +15
  6. Audrey +14
  7. Ivy +13
  8. Mackenzie +13
  9. Evelyn, Phoebe and Willow +12

Also Up

Amelia, Amy, Annabelle, Charlotte, Ebony, Elise, Eloise, Emily, Eve, Gabriella, Josephine, Kayla, Lacey, Lauren, Layla, Mariam, Olive, Skye, Victoria, Violet

Up Slightly

Alice, Ava, Caitlin, Elizabeth, Emma, Evie, Isla, Madison/Maddison, Matilda, Olivia, Piper, Poppy, Savannah, Scarlett, Sophia/Sofia and Sophie, Stella

Biggest Movers Down

  1. Abby/Abbey/Abbie -21 at least
  2. Amber -20
  3. Lillian -17
  4. Alana -16 at least
  5. Maya -14
  6. Samantha -14
  7. Tahlia -14
  8. Amelie -13
  9. Ellie -13
  10. Holly -12

Also Down

Aaliyah, Addison, Alyssa, Ashley, Charlie/Charli/Charlee, Chelsea, Eden, Erin, Georgia, Hayley, Imogen, Isabella, Leah, Madeline and Madeleine, Mia, Mikayla/Makayla, Molly, Natalie, Sienna, Stephanie, Summer, Taylor/Tayla/Taylah

Down Slightly

Abigail, Alexandra and Alexis, Angelina, Bella, Claire, Eliza, Ella, Eva, Indiana/Indianna,Isabel/Isabelle, Jade, Jasmine, Jessica, Lily/Lilly, Lola, Lucy, Paige, Sarah, Zoe

No Change in Position

  • Ruby #2
  • Grace #14
  • Hannah #21
  • Zara #31
  • Lara #72
  • Anna #74

New or Returned to the Top 100

  • Aria #83
  • Olive #90
  • Skye #92
  • Josephine #93
  • Mariam #94
  • Elise #96
  • Ebony #97
  • Lacey #98
  • Lauren #99

Gone from the Top 100

  • Abby/Abbey/Abbie #80
  • Alana #85
  • Erin #90
  • Madeline #92
  • Taylor/Tayla/Taylah#95
  • Natalie #96
  • Ashley #99
  • Stephanie #100

Boys Name Trends for 2012 – Australia

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Biggest Movers Up

  1. Braxton +60 at least
  2. Hudson +42
  3. Kai +40 at least
  4. Archer +29
  5. Lincoln +19
  6. Leo +14
  7. Declan +12
  8. Hugo +11
  9. Dylan +10
  10. Flynn +10

Also Up

Adam, Ali, Archie, Beau, Christopher, Darcy, Dominic, Hunter, Isaac, Marcus, Mason, Muhammad, Nicholas, Patrick, Toby

Up Slightly

Alexander, Angus, Anthony, Daniel, Elijah, Harrison, Henry, Jack, James, John, Levi, Luca, Nathan, Noah, Oscar, Owen, Ryan, Sebastian, Thomas

Biggest Movers Down

  1. Andrew -29
  2. Jett -28
  3. Ashton -20
  4. Callum -18
  5. Ryder -17
  6. Hamish -16
  7. Joseph -15
  8. Bailey -13
  9. David -13
  10. Caleb -12

Also Down

Aaron, Aidan/Aiden, Benjamin, Cameron, Charles, Connor, Edward, Eli, Finn, Hayden, Jayden, Jordan, Lachlan, Luke, Matthew, Michael, Nate, Riley, Seth,Tyler, Zachary and Zac

Down Slightly

Alex, Austin, Charlie, Chase, Cooper, Ethan, Gabriel, George, Harry, Jacob and Jake, Jesse, Joshua, Lucas, Max, Mitchell, Oliver, Samuel, William, Xavier

No Change in Position

  • Liam #12
  • Blake #36
  • Logan #38
  • Jasper #77
  • Christian #83
  • Jonathan #99

New or Returned to the Top 100

  • Braxton #41
  • Kai #61
  • Christopher #93
  • Ali #97
  • Muhammad #100

Gone from the Top 100

  • Jett #73
  • Seth #92
  • Aaron #98

Cannot be included

Jackson/Jaxon – last year they were two names, now they are one

The Top 100 Girls Names in Australia for 2012 (combined spellings)

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1. Charlotte 1854

2. Ruby 1807

3. Lily/Lilly 1768

4. Olivia 1676

5. Chloe 1642

6. Sophie 1611

7. Emily 1600

8. Mia 1564

9. Amelia 1555

10. Ava 1497

11. Isabella 1441

12. Sophia/Sofia1428

13. Ella 1408

14. Grace 1320

15. Sienna 1249

16. Maddison/Madison 1144

17. Zoe 1064

18. Matilda 938

19. Emma 870

20. Isla 865

21. Hannah 864

22. Isabelle/Isabel 820

23. Lucy 778

24. Scarlett 747

25. Ivy 688

26. Evie 669

27. Mila/Milla 668

28. Eva 655

29. Jessica 616

30. Abigail 610

31. Zara 608

32. Layla 599

33. Jasmine 591

34. Georgia 587

35. Harper 556

36. Summer 551

37. Sarah 539

38. Chelsea 532

39. Alexis 522

40. Willow 477

41. Stella 477

42. Savannah 471

43. Alice 467

44. Mackenzie 449

45. Imogen 448

46. Elizabeth 437

47. Holly 435

48. Annabelle 427

49. Hayley 412

50. Bella 411

51. Audrey 407

52. Charlie/Charli/Charlee 404

53. Maya 379

54. Paige 372

55. Addison 365

56. Molly 341

57. Poppy 341

58. Phoebe 313

59. Evelyn 312

60. Violet 311

61. Claire 306

62. Alyssa 305

63. Rose 299

64. Indiana/ Indianna 285

65. Piper 279

66. Madeleine 278

67. Ellie 274

68. Amy 260

69. Jade 252

70. Mikayla/ Makayla 249

71. Eliza 240

72. Lara 236

73. Eden 233

74. Anna 232

75. Lola 232

76. Heidi 226

77. Tahlia 225

78. Alexandra 222

79. Leah 206

80. Kayla 195

81. Victoria 191

82. Eve 183

83. Aria 175

84. Amber 175

85. Caitlin 169

86. Eloise 164

87. Aaliyah 158

88. Gabriella 152

89. Samantha 135

90. Olive 133

91. Amelie 125

92. Skye 108

93. Josephine 77

94. Mariam 76

95. Angelina 76

96. Elise 76

97. Ebony 76

98. Lacey 75

99. Lauren 74

100.Lillian 69

Source: Data from McCrindle Research

The Top 100 Boys Names in Australia for 2012 (combined spellings)

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1. Jack 1975

2. William 1927

3. Noah 1727

4. Ethan 1723

5. Oliver 1696

6. Thomas 1570

7. Lucas 1555

8. James 1516

9. Cooper 1490

10. Jackson/Jaxon 1473

11. Lachlan 1458

12. Liam 1351

13. Joshua 1323

14. Jacob 1281

15. Samuel 1198

16. Alexander 1194

17. Mason 1134

18. Max 1132

19. Benjamin 1131

20. Charlie 1098

21. Riley 1064

22. Xavier 1056

23. Ryan 991

24. Harrison 985

25. Isaac 935

26. Tyler 930

27. Daniel 921

28. Harry 916

29. Henry 905

30. Oscar 879

31. Levi 877

32. Jayden 863

33. Hunter 845

34. Aiden/Aidan 789

35. Jake 735

36. Blake 732

37. Flynn 695

38. Logan 689

39. Sebastian 660

40. Dylan 654

41. Braxton 641

42. Patrick 630

43. Matthew 629

44. Elijah 609

45. Luke 604

46. Archie 594

47. Eli 593

48. Nicholas 590

49. Michael 583

50. Connor 583

51. Hudson 569

52. Hayden 558

53. Zachary 550

54. Leo 527

55. Mitchell 523

56. Nate 514

57. Angus 502

58. Beau 471

59. Chase 450

60. Jordan 449

61. Kai 443

62. Archer 443

63. Nathan 440

64. Joseph 436

65. Finn 428

66. Adam 417

67. Lincoln 414

68. Edward 411

69. Caleb 391

70. Owen 367

71. George 364

72. Hamish 363

73. Marcus 362

74. Luca 360

75. Bailey 348

76. Hugo 341

77. Jasper 328

78. Toby 326

79. Charles 323

80. Ashton 323

81. Austin 322

82. Alex 315

83. Christian 275

84. Declan 271

85. Darcy 269

86. Ryder 245

87. Anthony 218

88. Dominic 217

89. Cameron 213

90. Zac 211

91. Jesse 209

92. Gabriel 207

93. Christopher 197

94. Callum 192

95. David 182

96. Andrew 137

97. Ali 135

98. John 130

99. Jonathan 128

100. Muhammad 109

Source: Data from McCrindle Research

Celebrity Baby News: Poppy Montgomery and Shawn Sanford

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poppy-montgomery-240x320Hollywood actress Poppy Montgomery, and her partner, Microsoft executive Shawn Sanford, welcomed their daughter Violet Grace Devereux on April 22. Violet Sanford was born at 7.57 am, weighed 3 kg (6lb 12oz), and measured 49.5 cm long. She joins big brother Jackson, aged 5, who is from Poppy’s previous relationship to actor Adam Kaufman.

Violet’s floral name continues a family tradition, for Poppy and her sisters are named after flowers too. Poppy’s family was covered as a celebrity sibset last year, and Poppy’s own name featured on the blog for Remembrance Day.

Juniper Lux and Ruby Tuesday

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Colour_City8Twins

Marco Erwin and Anton Drago (Bella, Georgia)

Stella Mary and Jock Albert

 

Girls

April Juliet (Mia, Evie, Bella)

Goldie Violet Kathleen (Oliver, Tobias, Elliot)

Harriet Maeve (Ivy)

Holly Astrid Sloan (Freya)

Ivy Genevieve

Juniper Lux

Mackinnon Maggie (Patterson “Paddy”)

Magdalena Rose (Zofia)

Ruby Tuesday

Vivian Margaret (Eleanor)

 

Boys

Brandt Bruhn (Charlie)

Carson Scott (Ryan, Curtis)

Evan Lawrence (Zoe)

Felix Benjamin (Chanelle, Calen, Josch, Sashia, Evie, Jaspa)

Gus Oscar (Elsie, Ned, Tilly)

Koby Tenzin (Taj, Maya)

Kyran Mace

Ned Thomas

Vincent Marco (Oliver, Joseph)

Wylie Robert (Mac, Jonty, Zander)

 

Most popular names this week

Girls: Ava

Boys: Nate and Oscar

(Photo is a street in Orange showing the autumn colours)