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Tag Archives: celebrity baby names

Celebrity Baby News: Jules and Anna Lund

18 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Radio host Jules Lund, and his wife Anna, welcomed their daughter Indigo Ellen earlier this week. Indigo Lund joins big sister Billie, aged 2.

Jules is co-host of the radio show Fifi and Jules on the Today Network, which he presents with Fifi Box. He was one of the presenters on Channel 9’s travel programme Getaway, but has recently quit to spend more time with his family. He is keen to pursue television projects with his radio partner, Fifi, who is contracted to Channel 7.

Anna (nee Dusek) and Jules were married in 2009, and honeymooned in Italy and Croatia.

(Photo of Jules and Anna from Zimbio)

Celebrity Baby News: Mitch Lewis and Sarah Collard

18 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

celebrity baby names

Sports presenter Mitch Lewis, and his fiancee Sarah Collard, welcomed their first child this morning and have named their son James Christopher. James Lewis was born at 12.29 am, and his birth was announced on radio and Twitter.

Mitch is the son of NRL legend Wally Lewis, and the older brother of actor Lincoln Lewis. They are both very excited, as they have become a grandfather and an uncle for the first time. Mitch is a presenter on Channel 9 Sports and Nova FM radio, and the host of Broncos Insider.

Sarah is a nurse, and expressed surprise on Twitter that the public might be interested in her new baby. I’m pretty sure many of them will be.

(Top photo shows Mitch with his father Wally; bottom photo shows Lincoln holding his nephew James)

Celebrity Baby News: Luke and Lauren Hodge

18 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ Comments Off on Celebrity Baby News: Luke and Lauren Hodge

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

AFL star Luke Hodge, and his wife Lauren, welcomed their son Chase Brady on October 3. Chase Hodge was born at 12.15 pm weighing 3.9 kg (8lb 11oz), and joins big brother Cooper, aged 4. Luke is the captain of the Hawthorn Hawks, who made it to the Grand Final this year, but were narrowly beaten by the Sydney Swans. Lauren (nee Kirkman) and Luke were married in 2009.

(Photo from FiveAA website)

Celebrity Baby News: Leila McKinnon and David Gyngell

18 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, nicknames

497286-leila-mckinnonChannel 9 presenter Leila McKinnon, and her husband David Gyngell, welcomed their first child on October 17, and have named their son Edmund (who will be known as Ted). Ted Gyngell was born in the early hours of the morning at Prince of Wales Private Hospital in Randwick, weighing 3.01 kg (6 lb 10 oz), and 51 cm long.

Leila was born in Iran to an English mother and New Zealander father, and grew up in Queensland. She began her journalism career in 1993 at WIN Television, and joined the Channel Nine Network in 1995. Leila is a co-host on Weekend Today, and regularly fills in on Channel 9 News and A Current Affair. She and David were married in a beach ceremony at Byron Bay in 2004.

David is the son of Bruce Gyngell, the first man to appear on Australian television, and a second cousin of the comedian Kim Gyngell. David’s great-great grandfather did the fireworks for the wedding for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, and his great-grandfather was the first cider-maker in Australia. David is also the best friend of James Packer, the former owner of Channel 9 (David and James first met at school, and their fathers were also best friends). David is in his second stint as CEO of Channel 9 after resigning in 2005, and relocating to Los Angeles. Ratings suffered during his absence, and he returned to the job in 2007. David was in crisis talks over debt negotiations for Channel 9 when he had to rush off to hospital to be by his wife’s side.

UPDATE: Leila reveals that Ted is a nickname they gave their baby in the womb, even before they knew it was a boy, and they wanted a name which could have Ted as its short form. Leila always wanted an old name which dated from before the Norman Conquest, and says that sometimes they call their boy Edmund the Magnificent.

My Top Five Name Blog-Related Peeves

14 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Naming Issues

≈ 18 Comments

Tags

Australian slang terms, Babynameobsessed, celebrity baby names, choosing character names, eBay, father-son rule, Google, name meanings, pet peeves, twinsets, Twitter, unisex names

This week was Pet Peeves Week (which I think only exists on the Internet), and several bloggers took the opportunity to get a few of life’s little annoyances off their chest, including Ebony at Babynameobsessed.

Many name bloggers say that they started out with some naming peeves, but that continual blogging about names tended to dilute or even reverse their irritation, leaving them with a great sense of well-being and peace. Maybe a couple of years ago they couldn’t stand matchy twin names, boyish names on girls, or attention-seeking celebrity baby names, but now they think Doris and Boris as twins is cool, Frederick is actually kind of spunky on a girl, and some minor celeb calling their kid Gusty Glock requires only an amused and tolerant chuckle in response.

To an extent I can relate, but to an even bigger extent I can’t, because while blogging about names may have finished off some of my pet peeves, it has given me a whole new bunch to get annoyed by. After some twenty months of blogging, I have got quite a few things that now grate on my nerves beyond all endurance. I’ve cut it down to only the top five though, in order not to grate on yours too much.

1. Reborners who call their reborn dolls “babies”

In case you don’t know, reborn dolls are baby dolls which are incredibly lifelike in appearance – so much so that they can be mistaken for an actual baby (and have been). Reborners are hobbyists who make and/or collect reborn dolls. I don’t any problems with reborn dolls, or those who make or own them. However, I do have a problem with calling them babies. Reborn dolls are not babies. They are dolls.

Each day I ask Google to trawl through the Internet for me and bring me information tagged with the word baby, and each day I get a stack of threads from reborn dolls forums or entries from reborning blogs.

People call other things their “baby”, and it doesn’t seem to bother me. If someone writes, I’ve been riding my baby all day, I somehow immediately understand they are referring to a motorcycle, and if someone says, My poor baby had to be locked outside, I get an automatic picture in my mind that it’s a dog they’re talking about. I skim past and go on to the next item.

But when I read, I sold my first baby on eBay!, My baby’s leg fell off and I can’t reattach it, or I just rooted my baby’s head (if not Australian, check slang guide as to why that’s so disturbing), I practically have a heart attack. Even knowing they mean a doll, I can’t stop the racing heartbeat, sweaty palms, nausea, and instinctive need to phone the police I’d feel if it was a real baby I was reading about.

I’ve asked Google to eliminate the words doll and reborn from the search, but of course, they don’t call their dolls “dolls”, they call them “babies”. Unless a baby poos, wees, needs to be fed, and wakes you up in the night, it’s not a baby, it’s a doll. Call it by its correct name.

2. Celebrity pregnancy stories in the media that go nowhere

When a story appears in the press announcing that a celebrity (or celebrity’s partner) is pregnant, I add them to my watchlist and ask Google to e-mail me when the baby is announced. Then months and months go by, and no baby story appears. Half the time I have to stalk them on Twitter to find out what the baby was called, and often I end up in a dead end.

I can’t see the point of teasing us with a celebrity pregnancy if we don’t get to find out if the baby is born and what its name is. I don’t know why they do this, but it’s very annoying. Follow through on celebrity pregnancies, newspapers!

3. The notion that baby names need to be short and simple, otherwise they will be too hard for children to spell when they reach school-age

This advice is constantly handed out, by parents on forums and even on professional baby name sites. It has to be the most depressing advice ever. Your poor baby isn’t even born yet, and already you are being told it will probably be too stupid to reach normal literacy levels by the age of five, and you’d better dumb its name right down.

I notice with further despondency that names for boys seem to be especially prone to this line of thought. Apparently girls can handle having a long name like Anastasia or Penelope, but a boy named Demetrius or Sebastian won’t be able to cope, and it’s better to call him something like Max or Liam.

We’re always being told that boys tend to lag behind girls in communications skills, and urged to make more effort to get our sons interested in reading and writing. Children tend to perform to expectation, and I can’t help but wonder if setting low goals for them while they’re still in the womb is the way to improve things.

Short names are great. Short names can be spunky and cool. If you choose a short, simple name for your baby, fantastic – as long as you do so because you love the name, and not because you think that’s all your idiot child can manage.

4. The father-son rule in Australian Rules Football

The AFL has a rule that the son of a senior player can be immediately recruited to the same club his father played for. The good news is that when a star player has a baby boy, it’s cause for enormous celebration and congratulations. The bad news is that when he has a baby girl, it is, at best, a big “meh”.

So often the names of footballer’s babies are not announced in the press, and when that happens, I know in my bones he had a daughter. Sadly, this always turns out to be true. If the media isn’t too interested, fans can be positively vicious to a newborn daughter of a man without sons.

Often the kindest comment you will read in fan forums is Better luck next time. I have read, not once or twice, but again and again, What a waste of good sperm, Throw it away and try again, If it has a [profane word for female genitalia] we don’t give a [profane], and the chilling, Maybe we can still breed from it.

I have found myself in tears of rage at these revolting comments; I can’t imagine what the parents’ reactions would be, and I hope they never read them. There may be many benefits to the father-son rule; frankly I don’t really care as the results of it are so sickening. Celebrating boys shouldn’t have to mean ignoring and denigrating girls.

5. Writers who pick bad names for their characters

Not everyone on a name website is looking for a name for their child – many are just interested in names and language in general, and there are lots of budding authors who want advice on picking character names.

Unfortunately, most of the time the way they pick character names is terrible. One of the most common clangers they make is to ask for a name “that means something”. I’m writing a story about a ballerina, and I need a name that means “dancer”. So her parents deliberately gave her a name meaning dancer, to make her become a dancer, and then it happened? If it worked that way, we’d all be calling our kids High Court Judge or Lottery Winner.

Another no-no is a character name which gives away what’s going to happen. I’m writing a fantasy story about a boy who ends up being able to control fire, what’s a name that means “fire” or “flame”? It’s not going to come as a huge shock to the reader if the character is basically called Mister Fireball, and then, amazingly, he turns out to be able to spit fireballs at will. It would seem pretty unlikely that a parent would give their kid a name with a particular meaning, and then by some astounding turn of fate, their name is what they become. Seriously, how many boys named Aidan do you know who possess a mystical power over fire?

My biggest peeve is probably when the character’s name is an obvious description of their personality, usually with protagonists given names meaning “kind”, “innocent”, “brave” and so on, while the bad guys end up with names meaning “cruel”, “evil”, or “slimy”. What parent would give their child a name which means “evil”? They would have to be so sick that if the person did end by going a bit wrong, you could only sympathise with them and put it down to the burden of being named Devious. If the heroine is called Pure Sweetangel, and her childhood pal is called Creepy Nastypants, any normal reader is going to be expecting that Creepy will turn out a bit of a rotter.

That’s the problem with naming characters – they shouldn’t look like an author named them, they should look as if their parents named them. Because that’s how people get named – by their parents. In other words, if your heroine is a sweet, simple girl, but her parents are pretentious jerks, then she won’t have a sweet simple name, but a pretentious jerky one. If she doesn’t, then you’ve got to explain why not (sweet simple godmother picked the name, family name handed down to every third daughter that’s left-handed, whatever).

Name your character the way a person is named, and then your character will seem like a person, not a character. Because no good reader wants to read a book peopled by characters. And you should only be writing for good readers. Bad readers have enough authors writing for them already.

Celebrity Baby News: Another Celebrity Baby Round-Up

11 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names

AFL player Matt Priddis, and his wife Ashleigh, recently welcomed their first child, and have named their daughter Nala May [pictured]. Matt plays for the West Coast Eagles, and Ashleigh is a pre-primary schoolteacher. The couple were married in 2009, with baby Nala arriving shortly before their third wedding anniversary.

NRL player Albert Kelly, and his partner, Mtia Tass, welcomed their first child last month, and named their daughter Brida-Lee. Albert is a cousin of NRL star Greg Inglis. His career got off to a rocky start until he joined Black on Track, an Aboriginal employment programme in Newcastle which taught him how to turn his life around. He has recently signed with the Gold Coast Titans.

Country music singer Melinda Schneider, and her partner, former rock vocalist Mark Gable, welcomed their son Sullivan James or “Sully” on August 28. Mark was front man for The Choirboys, and is now a radio host and an ambassador for beyondblue. Sullivan is the first child for Melinda and Mark, but he apparently has five siblings.

Actress Saskia Burmeister, and her husband, actor Jamie Croft, welcomed their first child in May. According to an international fan, Saskia and Jamie’s son is named Jackson, and claims that this information was on the Black & White & Sex Facebook page. If so, it has since been removed, and I can’t verify it, so this is just a rumour. You may recall that Saskia’s name was recently featured on the blog at public request.

Author Bronnie Ware welcomed her daughter Elena in February this year, and within 24 hours had been offered her first international book deal. Bronnie has a background working in palliative care, and her memoir, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying – A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing, has been published in 25 languages since its self-published success last year. Bronnie has just returned from a promotional tour in the UK.

Former AFL player Leigh Harding, and his wife Stacey, welcomed their daughter Milla last year. Milla was born 13 weeks premature after Stacey became dangerously ill with pre-eclampsia, and had to have an emergency caesarean in order to save her life, and Milla’s. Milla will be having her first birthday soon, and the Hardings are going on a charity walk to raise funds for Life’s Little Treasures, the foundation which gave them so much help after Milla’s birth. Leigh used to play for the North Melbourne Kangaroos, and now plays for the Werribee Tigers in the VFL.

Comedian Tim Ross, and his wife Michelle Glew-Ross, welcomed their first child last year and named their son Bugsy. Tim Ross or “Rosso” was part of a successful comedy duo with Merrick Watts for many years, Merrick and Rosso. Recently they parted ways to forge separate careers. You may remember that Tim’s former comedy partner Merrick welcomed a daughter named Kinga last year, and it seems that both have a penchant for out-of-the-ordinary baby names.

Celebrity Baby News: Celebrity Baby Round-Up

04 Thursday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring, unisex names

I’ve been very busy and got behind with the celebrity babies, so it seems like a good time to do a quick catch-up.

NRL player Gareth Widdop, and his fiancee Carley, welcomed their daughter Harper Rose on September 30, just hours after Gareth’s team, the Melbourne Storm, won the NRL Premiership. She was born unexpectedly in Bowral as they were travelling between Sydney and Melbourne. Harper joins big brother Brayden, aged 2. Gareth is originally from Yorkshire, in England, and moved to Melbourne as a teenager. He has been signed with the Storm since 2010, although he played for several years in their Under 18s and Under 20s programmes. He has also played for England internationally.

Actress Madeleine West, and her husband Shannon Bennett, welcomed their daughter Xanthe fairly recently. Xanthe joins big sisters Phoenix and Xascha, and big brother Hendrix (a real X-theme there). Madeleine became a household name on soapie Neighbours, and regularly appears in other television series. Shannon is the restaurateur at Vue de Monde, recently named Restaurant of the Year by The Age Good Food Guide.

NRL player Anthony Cherrington, and his on-off girlfriend, bikini model Monique Mears, welcomed their daughter Christine not long ago. Christine Cherrington joins big brother Moses, aged 17 months. Anthony is originally from New Zealand, and plays for the Sydney Roosters, but has been sidelined by injury since 2010.

Paralympian Erik Horrie, and his fiancee Michelle, welcomed their son Lewis in early September during the Paralympic Games; they already have two daughters together. Erik was in a car accident at the age of 21 which left him with paraplegia, and he started out playing wheelchair basketball. Last year he took up rowing, and he won a silver medal at the 2012 Paralympic Games.

NRL veteran Steve Menzies, and his wife Suyin, welcomed their son Harper Mackie on August 22. Harper Menzies was born at at 4.24pm at Royal North Shore Private Hospital weighing 2.79kg (just under 6 lb). His middle name is after his great-grandfather, Mackie Campbell, a pioneer with the Manly Sea Eagles. He joins big sister Miller, aged 2. Steve played for the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles from 1993-2008; he then played for the Bradford Bulls in England, and is currently with the Catalans Dragons in France. Yep, two NRL babies named Harper – one male, one female.

Netball champion Sharelle McMahon, and her husband Brek Mansfield, welcomed their first child on August 30 and have named their son Xavier Gaz. Sharelle is the former captain of the Melbourne Vixens, has played for the national team, the Diamonds, and has won three gold medals and a silver at the Netball World Championships, and two gold and two silver at Commonwealth Games.

Dating show contestant Jenny Blake, and her husband Mark Geppert, welcomed their son Angus – Gus for short – back in the autumn [pictured]. Angus Geppert joins big sister Olive, aged 2. Jenny is one of the few female farmers to have appeared on rural romance reality show, The Farmer Wants a Wife. Although love didn’t work out for Jenny on the show, she soon became engaged to Mark, who she’d been friends with for years, but considered slightly too young for her. The happy Geppert family now live on their farm in southern New South Wales.

Comedian Julian Morrow, and his wife Lisa Pryor, welcomed their second child early in the year and named their son Ed. I’m not sure whether Ed is short for Edward/Edwin/Edgar/Edmund etc, or if that’s his whole name. Ed Morrow has a big sister named Anna, aged 3. Julian has been a comedy staple on television for many years, and is best known for his work with the satiric and sometimes controversial show, The Chaser. Lisa is a former journalist who is now training in medicine.

Waltzing With … Octavia

30 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Waltzing with ...

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, honouring, name combinations, name history, name meaning, name trends, names from television, Roman names, Shakespearean names, sibsets, UK name popularity, US name popularity

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

This blog post was first published on September 30 2012, and revised and re-posted on June 1 2016.

It’s a long weekend in New South Wales, South Australia and the ACT, and in those places, Monday will be Labour Day, celebrating the Australian labour movement. This vibrant and influential strand in Australian politic began in the early 19th century with the first craft unions, who banded together to seek higher wages and lower working hours.

This was in the days when any servant who left their employment without their master’s permission would be hunted down as a bushranger, and even taking off from work for an hour would see you put in prison. In those times, a fifth of the prison population were there for that reason.

It was in August 1855 that the Stonemasons Associations in Sydney went on strike, demanding to work only eight hours each day. They won their cause and celebrated with a victory dinner on October 1. The following year, the stonemasons of Melbourne formed a protest march to demand an eight-hour working day; they were the first organised group in Australia to achieve their goal with no loss of pay.

The goal of “eight hours labour, eight hours recreation, eight hours rest” was one that unionists had been working towards since the early 19th century, and in 1916 it became law in Victoria, but didn’t come in nationally until the 1920s, with the forty-hour week enshrined in 1948.

It would be nice to say that was the end of the workers’ struggle, but the forty-hour week is still under threat. Indeed, thanks to e-mail and mobile phones sometimes it feels as if we never leave work at all. So tomorrow please switch off your laptop, and have your calls sent to voicemail, because we deserve at least one day a year free from employment.

In honour of the Eight Hour Movement we will look at a name connected to the number eight.

Name Information
Octavia is the feminine form of Octavius, a Roman family meaning “eighth”, from the Latin octavus, and taken from a personal name. Although the personal name is believed to have been given to an eighth child, it’s also thought that it could have been bestowed on those born in the eighth month (originally, October).

The Octavii originated from the town Velletri, in the Alban Hills just south of Rome. The area belonged to the Volsci people, who in ancient times were one of the most dangerous enemies of the Romans. The famous warrior queen Camilla was one of the Volsci.

The most famous member of this family is the Emperor Augustus, whose original name was Gaius Octavius Thurinus. Coincidentally, he went on to give his name to the month of August, which is the modern-day eighth month. Augustus had both a sister and a half-sister named Octavia, and the younger one, his sister, was the wife of Mark Antony.

The marriage was one of political convenience, but Octavia appears to have been a loyal and faithful wife. Famously, Mark Antony abandoned her and their children to take up with the fascinating Queen Cleopatra; he divorced her and not long after, committed suicide. Octavia was left as sole caretaker of their children, as well as the children from her first marriage, and she was also guardian to Mark Antony’s children to one of his previous wives, and to those he had by Cleopatra.

While Cleopatra was seen as the alluring temptress, glamorous, brilliantly intellectual and powerful, Octavia was cast in the role of the good wife and mother, who does what is best for her husband, her family, and Roman society. In his play Antony and Cleopatra, Shakespeare portrays poor Octavia as short and round-faced with brown hair, to ensure the dichotomy between the two is even sharper. I’m not sure what is supposed to be so hideous about being short, round-faced and brown-haired (sounds quite cute), but to the Elizabethans it meant “ugly”.

She may not have been the sexy one, but the Romans esteemed Octavia for her strength of character and nobility, and when she died, she was given a state funeral and several honours, including being one of the first Roman women to have coins minted in her image. Her great-granddaughter was named Octavia after her, and this young lady was so beloved by the Roman people that they rioted to protest her cruel treatment at the hands of her psychotic husband, Nero. Unhappy marriages yet great popularity was the fate of these Roman Octavias.

Octavia has been used as an English name since the 17th century, becoming more common in the 19th. A famous namesake from the Victorian era was social reformer Octavia Hill, who worked towards housing for the poor; she was named Octavia because she was her father’s eighth daughter. An American namesake from this era was socialite Octavia Le Vert, a lavish hostess and supporter of the arts. More recently we might think of actress Octavia Spencer, from The Help.

In the US, Octavia was on the Top 1000 from the 19th century until the 1930s, then returned in the 1970s. This coincided with the career of African-American science-fiction novelist Octavia E. Butler, who began writing in 1971. Octavia’s final novel in her Parable series was published in 1998, the last time Octavia was on the Top 1000. In the 20th century, the name never got any higher than #484 in 1987.

In 2015, 173 girls were named Octavia – a huge increase on the previous year, when 71 babies were given the name. Rebellious teen Octavia Blake on The 100, played by Marie Avgeropoulos, may be an inspiration in its sudden rise. In the UK in 2014, 26 baby girls were named Octavia.

Octavia could be used for an eighth child or grandchild, or for a baby born in August or October. Both these months celebrate milestones in the Sydney labour movement, and the number eight is the cornerstone of the Eight Hour Movement. Earlier this year, Labor MP Michelle Rowland welcomed a daughter named Octavia, a very suitable name for someone in labour politics.

The meaning of the name is connected to music, because an octave is the interval between one musical pitch and another and each scale has eight notes. In addition, the Octavia is a sound effects pedal used by Jimi Hendrix. The number eight is important in several spiritual or philosophical systems, such as Judaism, Wicca, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Taoism, and to the Chinese, the number eight symbolises prosperity and good luck.

Boosted by science fiction, Octavia may be a rarity, but doesn’t sound too unusual next to popular Olivia and Ava. Octavia is dignified, formal, strong, intelligent, and slightly clunky – a beautiful name with its own elegance.

POLL RESULT
Octavia received an excellent approval rating of 84%, making it one of the highest-rated names of 2012. 36% of people loved the name Octavia, and only one person hated it.

(Picture is of the Eight Hour Day Monument in Melbourne; photo from Monument Australia).

Celebrity Baby News: James and Erica Packer

27 Thursday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring, nicknames

Billionaire casino mogul James Packer, and his wife Erica, welcomed a daughter on September 22, and have named her Emmanuelle Sheelah. The middle name honours Erica’s mother, who passed away last December after losing her battle with cancer. Emmanuelle Packer joins big sister Indigo, aged 4, and big brother Jackson, aged 2.

James is the son of late media mogul Kerry Packer, and grandson of Sir Frank Packer, who inherited the family media dynasty from his father, Robert Packer. The family’s fortune is reputed to have originated in a stroke of luck, when Robert found 10 shillings at a Tasmanian racetrack and put it on a winning horse at odds of 12-1. This gave him enough money to move to the mainland and begin his career as a journalist.

James inherited control of the family company, Consolidated Press Holdings Limited, and formerly was Executive Chairman of Publishing and Broadcasting Limited. Since his father’s death, he has moved away from the family’s traditional media business, and focused on creating a worldwide gambling empire, Crown Limited. The BRW Rich 200 lists him as the sixth richest person in Australia, and estimates his net worth as $5.21 billion. Forbes magazine has him listed as the fourth rich, with assets of $4.5 billion.

Erica (nee Baxter) is a former model and singer. She and James were married in 2007 on the French Riviera. Since her marriage, Erica has put her energy into  charitable causes.

The Packers have a knack of choosing names which can be turned into popular nicknames. Indigo to the hyper-trendy Indi, Jackson to perennial favourite Jack, and now Emmanuelle, which can become the ubiquitous Emmy, sharing its short form with Emily, Emma and Emerson.

The People’s Choice of Boy’s Names

23 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Themes and Lists

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

African-American names, alphanumeric names, American slang, anagram names, Anglo-Saxon names, animal names, aristocratic names, Australian Aboriginal names, Australian slang terms, banned names, bird names, birth notices, Bonds Baby Search, celebrity baby names, computer hacker names, controversial names, created names, english names, famous namesakes, germanic names, Google, Greek names, historical records, Indian names, J.R.R. Tolkien, locational names, Maori names, meteorological names, middle names, mythological names, name history, name meaning, nature names, nicknames, Old English names, Old Norse, polynesian names, popular culture, royal names, saints names, scandinavian names, slang terms, Spanish dialect words, surname names, tree names, unisex names, US name popularity, vintage names, vocabulary words, Welsh names

Adolf

A form of the Germanic name Adalwolf, meaning “noble wolf”. The Old English form is Æthelwulf, and there are a few famous men of this name in English history, most notably the father of Alfred the Great. The name was often used amongst the royal houses of northern Europe, and the Latinised form Adolphus turns up in the monarchy of the United Kingdom. There is a saint called Adolf of Osnabrück, a 9th century German monk. Up until the mid-twentieth century, the name was common in central and northern Europe, and can be found in Australia due to immigration from Germany and Scandinavia. The reason this name has been included is because barely a day goes by without someone Googling: “Is it legal to call your child Adolf?”, to which I can say, yes, it is legal here, and you can find quite a few Australians in the records with this name – including ones born during and shortly after World War II. I have met a man named Adolf (born around the early 1960s), and I believe he was named after his grandfather. The other chestnut is, “Is it legal to call your child Adolf Hitler in Australia?” to which I reply, Why would you want to do that? Seriously, why? As the name Ned Kelly is banned because he is considered too wicked, I’m pretty sure Adolf Hitler would also be illegal here.

Buster

This spunky name has more history than you might think. In England, it was first used in the middle position; Buster is a variant of the surname Bustard, after the bird. In 18th century America, it seems to have been more common for African-Americans, and may have started as a pet name in the sense of “breaker”. Later it took on the meaning of “unusual, prodigious, amazing”. Buster is used to address males in the same way as pal or fella (“Now listen up, buster”). This comes from the Spanish dialect busté, meaning “you”. It’s gone on to have negative connotations. One of the most famous men with this name is actor Joseph “Buster” Keaton, who started his career in vaudeville as a small child. He claimed to have received his nickname as a toddler from Harry Houdini, after falling down a flight of stairs unhurt. Houdini allegedly remarked, “That was a real buster!”, meaning “a fall with the potential to cause injury”. So Keaton’s name indicated he was tough enough to take a tumble. Buster Brown was a cartoon strip boy who was an angelic-looking blond prankster. In Australian slang, come a buster means to fall or fail by misfortune, while buster is a term for a strong wind – especially the Southerly Buster. This is a name Sydneysiders give to the abrupt cool change that sometimes blows in from the south during the warmer months. Vintage name Buster has recently become rather an Australian favourite for boys, although in the novel, The Shiralee, by D’arcy Niland, Buster is a little girl.

Chester

Chester is a city in Cheshire, England, founded by the Romans as a fortress in 79; its size has led some historians to speculate that the Romans intended it to be the capital, rather than London. Its current name comes from the Old English Ceaster, meaning “Roman fort”, and its early history was very military, with wars seemingly constant. Even King Arthur is supposed to have won a major battle here, and it was the last city to fall to the Normans during the Conquest. Today it’s a thriving modern city which still tries to preserve its historic buildings. Chester has been used as a personal name since the 16th century, probably after the surname, although early births in Cheshire suggest they may have been named directly for the city itself. Although it’s been a popular name in the US in its time, and only left the Top 1000 in the mid-1990s, for some reason it never caught on in a big way here. I was surprised to see it on a baby in the Bonds Baby Search Competition this year. For some reason, this baby name is often Googled, although the slang term chester is an impediment to its use.

Digby

An English surname from a place name meaning “settlement by the ditch”, derived from a combination of Old English and Old Norse. The name seems to have been first given in honour of the aristocratic Digby family, Anglo-Irish peers whose family seat in Coleshill, Warwickshire was granted to them by Henry VII. It is from the town of Coleshill that the personal name originates in the 17th century. One of the most famous of this clan was Sir Kenelm Digby, a Catholic philosopher considered a great eccentric for his exuberant personality and fascination with science, which extended to studying alchemy, astrology and magic (not considered incompatible with science then); he was the first person to note the importance of oxygen to plants. A man of action as well as thought, he became a privateer, and killed a man in a duel; he also wrote several cookbooks, invented the modern wine bottle and managed to fit in a secret romance to a famous beauty which led to their marriage. A true all-rounder. This name regularly appears in birth notices here, especially from Victoria, and may be encouraged by comedienne Cal Wilson, who welcomed a son named Digby a few years ago. People seem to either loathe this name or find it irresistibly cute; I must confess to being in the second category.

Elfyn

This is the Welsh form of the Old English name Ælfwine, meaning “elf friend”; it went out of use after the Norman Conquest. J.R.R. Tolkien liked to think of the name as meaning “friend of the elves”, and invented two fictional characters with this name who formed close bonds with elves. Modern forms include Alvin and Elvin, both taken from the surname form of the name. There are several famous people in Wales with Elfyn as either their first name or surname, including young rally driver Elfyn Evans and poet Menna Elfyn. For reasons I cannot explain, it is Googled several times a week.

Jharal

Jharal Yow Yeh is an NRL star who plays for the Brisbane Broncos. An Aboriginal Australian from the Margany people of Queensland, he also has Torres Straits Islander, Vanuatuan and Chinese heritage. Now aged 22, he has been playing for the Broncos since 2009, for the Indigenous All-Stars since 2010, and for both the Queensland state team, the Maroons, and the Australian national side, the Kangaroos, since last year. Early this season he sustained a serious leg injury, and is still recovering. People Google Jharal’s name all the time, asking for its meaning, and often querying whether it’s of Indigenous origin. In fact, his name was created for him by his grandmother. His mother couldn’t decide what to call him, so she asked nana Iris to name him. Iris cleverly arranged the letters of all the strongest men in her family into a name, and came up with Jharal. It is taken from the initials of James, Harold, Anthony, Reece, Arthur and Linc. The name is pronounced JHUH-rahl, and Iris says that most people think it is an Indian name. In fact, by coincidence, a jharal is a mountain goat from India. Names created for celebrities often seem too unique for others to use, but I have seen Jharal a few times in birth notices recently. Looking for a nickname? Jharal is known to his family as Joe.

Koa

This unisex name has several different origins. There is a Hawaiian male name Koa meaning “strong, brave, fearless”, and it’s also the name of a Hawaiian tree, the Acacia koa. The wood was traditionally used to make dug-out canoes and certain types of surfboards. In Maori, the word koa means “happiness”. In the Kaurna language of South Australia, the word koa means “crow”, and the Koa people come from south-east Queensland, so it’s also a tribal name. There has been a sudden proliferation of this name in Australian birth notices, and that might be because Tom Dumont from No Doubt welcomed a son named Koa last year. However, I am beginning to see far more girls named Koa in birth notices than boys. This may be because of model and actress Koa Whelan, a contestant on this year’s dating show, Please Marry My Boy. I think this works equally well for boys and girls, although the first meaning is male only.

Neo

This is from an Ancient Greek prefix meaning “new, young, fresh”. It turns up in words such as neonatal, meaning “pertaining to the newborn”, or neologism, meaning “a freshly coined word”. The name has become well-known since 1999 because Neo is the protagonist of the cyberpunk Matrix film series. In the films, the character’s name is Thomas Anderson, and Neo is his computer hacker identity (Anderson does have the letters N, E and O in it). Neo is also an anagram of One, and the films seek to discover whether Neo is “The One”, a Messiah-like figure who will be able to rescue humanity. The films have become cult classics, and intermingle a range of philosophical and spiritual ideals from the East and the West – it’s even spawned its own religion, Matrixism. From the amount of times that people have Googled neo baby name or neo for a boy, there are quite a few parents considering using this name. Neo fits right in with current trends, and doesn’t sound any stranger than Leo. It is very strongly associated with the film character though. However, Australians have a solid history of gaining name inspiration from the movies, and most of The Matrix series was filmed in Sydney, giving it an Australian connection.

Rune

A Scandinavian name derived from Old Norse meaning “secret”. The runes are the letters of the runic alphabets, which were used to write different Germanic languages, dating from at least the first or second century AD. Runic inscriptions seem to have been for magical and divinatory use, and perhaps their knowledge was restricted to an elite in early times. According to Norse mythology, the runes were originally stolen from the god Odin. They are part of English history, because the Anglo-Saxons had their own runic alphabet. If you have read The Hobbit, you will have seen Anglo-Saxon runes used on a dwarven map; Tolkien later invented his own runic alphabet which appears in The Lord of the Rings. Rune stones are  used for divination today, often in a similar way to tarot cards. The name isn’t unusual in Scandinavia, and you may know the name from the Polish speedway rider Rune Holta, born in Norway. I think this is a simple, attractive name with layers of history and meaning.

Zephyr

A zephyr is a light, warm wind. It comes from the name Zephyrus, who was the Greek god of the west wind – the gentlest of breezes, which served as a harbinger of spring. He married both Iris, the goddess of the rainbow, and Chloris, the goddess of flowers – who is also seen as a deity of spring (and named Flora by the Romans). Children may know the name as that of a bat in the Silverwing book series, and, in the form Zephir, as the monkey in the Babar the Elephant stories. Grown ups may be reminded of The Zephyr Song by the Red Hot Chilli Peppers. If you take the name as derived directly from the god, then it is male, but if you accept it as a nature name and vocabulary name, it is unisex. It only seems to be Googled to my blog as a male name however. Pronounced ZEF-uhr, this name is unsual but not outrageous; it seems like a breezy alternative to popular Z names like Zachary, Zeke or Zane. The obvious nickname is Zeff or Zeffy.

(Picture shows actor Keanu Reeves in his role of Neo from The Matrix; Sydney skyline in background)

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