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Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

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Tag Archives: name combinations

Tilba and Tyde

14 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

tilbatilba

Twins

Estelle and Tate

 

Girls

Azalea Jade (Kaylan, Dakota)

Cadence Anne

Catriona Lee (Callan)

Celina Helen (Annika, Callie)

Deanna (Francesco, Nadia)

Della Therese

Eleanor Jean Dawn

Elsie Elizabeth

Grace Marjorie “Maggie”

Logan Faith (Maddison)

Rosie Kathleen

Saskia Eve (Isabel)

Tilba Val (Zeff)

Vayda Bella

Velvet Dakota Rose (Alysha, Rose, Charlotte, Holly, Daisy, Lily)

 

Boys

Alessandro Antonio (Valentina)

Banjo Thomas

Bennett Ellis

Finnian Joseph (Molly, Una)

Freddie Donovan

Jarrah John

Leo Paxton

Levi Arrow

Rex Champion (Jonty, Emma)

Rio Andre

Royce

Tucker Abe (Ada, Milly, Harvey)

Tyde Rikah (Asha)

Uriah

Zachariah (Xavier, Seraphina)

(Photo shows the heritage-listed village of Tilba Tilba, near Central Tilba, on the NSW South Coast; its name is from the local Aboriginal language and means “many waters”)

Koa Indigo and Finn Jade

07 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Diving in the Coral Sea, Australia at Osprey Reef.

Twins

Dexter James and Chloe Louise (William, Hamish, Curtis, Xander)

Frankie Mack and Millie Kate (Roxy, Riley)

Indie Tess and Maisy Elizabeth

 

Girls

Addlyn Teecie (Alex, Cohan, Malachi)

Azayliah Jade

Bentley Tate (Mac)

Danika Joy

Isla Lillian Sylvie (Sienna, Violet)

Koa Indigo

Latisha Savannah Celina

Lilly Ly

Louella June (William, Benton)

Mae Dorothy (Evelyn)

Mary-Sue (Joshua)

Maybelle Faith Irene (Archer)

Mia Sian

Shardonae

Shiloh Rose-anne

 

Boys

Archie James Frederick (Chloe, Willa)

Arthur William (Oscar, Edward)

Boston Terence

Eamon Douglas

Fenris Leander

Finn Jade

Lazarus (Elise, William, Michael)

Mattityahu Zerah (Immanuel, Zevulun, Amram, Itamar, Benaya)

Rafael Sol Tobias (Leopold, Astrid)

Rion (Ren)

Rory Quinn

Shannon Noal

Tate Julian

Tommy Zander (Brock)

Zaide Wesley (Lyndon)

(Photo shows the Osprey Reef in the Coral Sea, northern Australia; photo by Xanthe Rivett. If you would like to see our Coral Sea marine life protected, please click this link and learn more).

George River and Harvey Rock

31 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

Thredbo-River-Rocks

Girls

Blair Frances

Cienna Inez June

Claudia Rae (Imogen, Lydia)

Esther Mary (Matilda, Frankie, Wally)

Evelyn Lark

Ginger Mae (Violet)

Liliana Violet (Charlotte, Emily, Harlequinn)

Lorelei Jasmine

Lowanna Rose (Sevilla)

Matisse Grace (Oscar)

Rania Lee Jane (Oksana, Josiah)

Ruby Narelle (Kayleb)

Sun Hera (Bae)

Willow Pearl (Piper, Jaissac)

Zara Belle Ruby (Archie, Sierra, Keisha)

 

Boys

Arlo Clifford

Austin Biju

Finn Elwood (Lilia)

Frederick Thomas Edward “Freddy” (Piper, Nellie)

George River (Harry)

Harvey Rock

Hunter Guy

Lewis Berian

Neoh Phoenix (Raiden, Tiden)

Raphael Charles Rockwell (Jacob)

Rjaye Charles

Sid Nelson (Ned)

Tobias Wolfgang Leo “Toby”

Umar Miq

Xavier Winton (Emma)

(Photo shows Thredbo River flowing over rocks in the Snowy Mountains region)

Lady and Lovella

24 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

DUBBO CHRISTIAN SCHOOL - 1 - 2013

Twins

Rose Judith and Laurel Averil

Ted Richard John and Harry Frederick James

 

Girls

Alba Juliet (Xavier)

Allegra Therese

Alynta Rose

Amethyst Lucia

Belle Florence (Ruby)

Carnae Rose

Esther Ruby (Thomas)

Florence Joan (Avalon)

Gia Adelaide (Noah)

Harlee Graham

Harper Jorge

Indigo Anique

Kooviannah Levina

Lady Charlize Mereani Hilda

Lily Leandra Grace (Aiden, Blake, Cooper)

Lovella Roze

Maggie May

Nira Yolanda Janene

Nova Amelia Lyn (Zed, Axel)

Olivia Rawinia Margaret

Payton Tedyjean (Angus, Bodie, Mharlly, Ryder)

Roxy Violet

Shoquana Sandra Phyllis Rose

Thea Elizabeth

Tilly Catherine (Felix)

 

Boys

Ace McLeod

Angus Julian (Coby)

Cadel Matthew (Amelie)

Djerrawah Lyndon Rex (Marley Ava, Jaxan)

Donald Jacob (Charli)

Elgan Lachlan Ronald

Eli Anthony Jaymex

Harper Terence (Axel)

Harvey Weston

Hector Montgomery Joseph (Miriam)

Indi Zayde

Jack Daniel

Jenson Flynn

Judd Clarence

Justice Ronald Jay

Keith William

Latrell Jaylahn

Mason Ian Carol

Ngemba Daigo

Orlando Hood

Sullivan Henry

Taj Gundi Paul

Te Aperama-Abram

William Sante Andrew

Zareen Ahmad (Banyal)

(Photo shows girls having a tea party at Dubbo Christian School in Dubbo, New South Wales: many of the names this week are from Dubbo birth notices)

Rafferty Rose and Rio Jackson

17 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

056623-422a3946-7e3d-11e3-9546-b22561104eaa

Twins

Silas Edward and Henry Charles

 

Girls

Anna Philomena (Curtly, Harvey)

Audrey Bethwyn (Taliah)

Clementine Jeanette Pamela (Holly, Sam)

Eloise Charlotte

Estelle Maeve

Gracie Finlayson (Rory)

Kitty Olive Rae (Clancy, Percy, Herbie)

Lowana Rose

Mabelle Jane

Masie August (Xander, Carter)

Pearl Yolanda (Olive)

Rafferty Rose

Rosalie Cynthia (Reuben)

Sloane Elizabeth

Sofia Graziella

Tara Zenetha (Eoin, Connall)

 

BOYS

Archer On

Axyl Jaxx (Mackenzi, Rubi)

Benjamin Arkana Tyler (Antonia)

Ezekiel Casper James

Hadrian (Hannah-Lee)

Kip Stephen

Linc Henley (Roc)

Louis Charles (Oscar, Fergus)

Max Lucca Thomas (Lucy, Rose, Leila)

Mekye Richie (Marli, Kalani)

Ned Mackenzie (Henry)

Orlando Gael (Emile)

Rio Jackson

Soren (Rupert)

Tasman Ernest

Tory John (Shae)

(Picture shows Caleb Tremellen and Hayley Lincoln trying to keep cool near Kyabram in regional Victoria during the record-breaking heatwave across southern and eastern Australia this week)

The 2013 Matilda Awards

16 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Blog News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Arabic names, Biblical names, celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, classic names, German names, germanic names, Irish names, name combinations, nicknames, popular names, rare names, royal names, sibsets, surname names, twin sets, underused classics

165256Welcome to the Matilda Awards, where we discover which names featured on the blog proved most popular with the public during 2013.

Waltzing With … Category

The most popular names featured in the Waltzing With … Category were LAYLA, which scored a 94% approval rating, and SULLIVAN, which scored a 96% approval rating – not just the highest-rated name for the category, but the highest-rated for the whole year.

Layla is an Arabic name with a romantic history, both in Muslim literature and popular culture; it is comfortably established in the Top 50. Sullivan is an Irish surname used as a first name; it was #306 in Victoria for 2012, and is rising in both the US and UK.

Layla and Sullivan did well not because they were deeply loved by the public, but because so few people hated them – in fact not a single respondent said they disliked the name Sullivan.

Famous Names Category

The most popular names featured in the Famous Names Category were MIRIAM, which scored an approval rating of 91%, and HENRY, which scored an approval rating of 95%.

Miriam is an ancient Biblical name, the name of one of the strongest and most interesting Old Testament heroines; it is an underused classic which has never left the charts yet never reached the Top 100. Henry is an English name of Germanic origin, long known as a royal name (and was featured as the name of a visiting prince); it is a popular classic which is gently rising in the Top 50.

Miriam was praised for being both strong and intelligent, and pretty and feminine; people also noted its many nickname options. Almost nobody disliked the name Henry.

Name Themes and Lists Category

The most popular names which were featured in the Names Themes and Lists Category were ALICE and AUGUST. Alice won convincingly, and also managed to win the original poll, while August received almost twice as many votes as its nearest opponent.

Alice is an English name of Germanic origin which has been used by royalty and aristocracy; it is currently rising in the Top 50, and was one of the fastest-rising names of 2012. August is a German short form of Augustus which featured as a rare royal name from history; it does not chart in Australia, but is currently rising in the US and UK.

Celebrity Babies

The most popular names for celebrity twins were HARVEY AND ROXANNE WELLER ALLEN, the son and daughter of singer Toby Allen and actor Darren Weller. They were the only celebrity twin names to be judged “adorable” by a majority of people – quite an achievement as there were an unusually high number of celebrity twins last year.

The most popular celebrity baby girl name was TESS CLEMENTINE HUGHES, the daughter of comedian and broadcaster Dave Hughes, and journalist Holly Ife. She was picked as favourite by 20% of respondents, who loved her hip name. Tess has a big sister named Sadie, and a big brother named Rafferty – what a cool sibset.

The most popular celebrity baby boy name was SEBASTIAN TANDER, the son of champion racing drivers Leanne and Garth Tander. He was picked as favourite by 30% of respondents, who found his smooth, stylish name appealing. Sebastian has a big sister named Scarlett – a sleek modern sibset.

From the Baby Name Round-Ups, the winning baby names were FREYA ROSE GOWER and SAMUEL ELLIOT. Freya is the daughter of NRL player Craig Gower, and model Amanda Flynn, and the name Freya has recently become a favoured choice for sporting celebrities. Samuel is the son of national women’s team cricketer Sarah Elliot, and cricket coach Rob Elliot.

Birth Announcements

The most popular names for multiples were MAGNOLIA MARY AND HENRY JOSEPH, who had a narrow win. Readers of Waltzing More Than Matilda are a broad-minded lot, and don’t believe Mary and Joseph are “too matchy” for twins. Or maybe they couldn’t resist voting for Henry once more.

In the girls name section, ETTA JUNE had a very comfortable win. Vintage, hip and extremely cute, Etta fits in with popular names such as Ella.

In the boys name section, JUDE WINTER absolutely trounced the opposition, gaining a massive 40% of the vote. This is a very stylish name combination, with Winter working just as well on a boy as it does on girls. Etta and Jude came from the same set of birth announcements in July – both their middle names seem inspired by the winter season, and both have a JOO sound in their names. Magnolia and Henry came from another set of July birth announcements – a victory for midwinter babies!

The most popular names in a sibset were ELSIE, NED, TILLY AND GUS, which just scraped through by a couple of votes. A very charming vintage short form sibset, these sisters and brothers were featured the day after Anzac Day.

What type of names did people like? Quite a variety, but royal names, vintage names, classic names, short form names, popular and rising names seem like the big winners.

Huon Jack and Ruben Smashem

10 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

mtreadhuoncb

Twins

Arya Dawn and Dakota Kaye

Evana Maree Annie and Dominik Wylie Jefferson

Evelyn and Sophia (James, Jasmine, Grace)

 

Girls

Anastasia Constance (Christopher, Luke, Francis)

Behati Donnella

Elena Winsome

Georgia Eloise (Imogen)

Jocelyn Clare “Josie”

Libby Renae

Lily Louise Phillipa

Louisa Anne (Asher)

Matilda Bessie

Poppy Joy Elizabeth

Samaira Vikash

Tika Ivy (Maimai)

 

Boys

Archie Ralph

Broqq Jose Edwardo

Henry Leonardus

Huon Jack

Jai Cruz (Zac, Jasper)

James Rothrock Crosswhite (Ava, Eve)

Muchovey Jon

Oakley Peter

Romeo Luka

Ruben Smashem (Janaya, Lukas, Jade)

Ryder Bon

Silas Charles Ross

(Photo shows a Huon pine, a conifer native to Tasmania; it is one of the oldest trees of the world, with single specimens more than 2000 years old. This stand of trees is more than 10 000 years old, and the species itself dates back perhaps 100 million years, to the time Australia was part of Gondwanaland. Despite its name, it is not a pine, but a podocarp)

Polly Catherine and Charlie Ace

03 Friday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

845127-5eb51d40-7246-11e3-b21a-c1acf4d34253

 

Twins

Memphis and Scarlette

Ruby and Saphria

 

Girls

Eloise Ada (Charlie)

Grace Dorothy Valencia (Zoe, Lexi)

Hazel Skye (Florence)

Holland

Ivy Pearl (Lucy, Molly)

Krimsin

Lennox Lacey

Melody Ann

Polly Catherine (Oscar)

River Mae

Vada Jay (Ava, Fenn, Seth, Coen)

Xanthe Estelle (Erin, Mia, Cecily)

 

Boys

Boston Jae

Charlie Ace

Dane Rolland (Neve)

Elwood Wilson

Felix Jose (Saskia)

Javi Pax

Kelsey Lucas

Lachlan Bruce

Maverick Moses (Logan)

Mohammed Aayan

Tomislav Mirko

Zayn Isa (Ebs)

(Photo shows New Year’s fireworks display on Sydney Harbour)

 

 

Waltzing with … Barton

29 Sunday Dec 2013

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

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

english names, honouring, name combinations, name history, name meaning, names of Prime Ministers, nicknames, sibsets, surname names

centennial_park

Soon it will be New Year’s Day – the first day of 2014, with a whole calendar of days ahead to fill. Australians have something else to celebrate: the 113th anniversary of the Federation of Australia, which took place on January 1 1901.

Federation was the process by which the six British colonies of New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia were united as one nation – the Commonwealth of Australia. Unfortunately, we don’t celebrate this momentous occasion, having stayed up late New Year’s Eve, and we already have a public holiday anyway, so instead Australia Day is our national holiday.

The movement towards Federation began in the late 19th century, when enough people had been born in Australian to identify as “Australian” rather than British (even though they were still British subjects). Nationalism was celebrated in songs and poetry, with Banjo Paterson one of the poets who led the way, and technology had improved enough that people could travel and communicate across the country.

Despite this, it was hard to get everyone interested in being federated, as there were so many issues to resolve. At one time, it was thought New Zealand and Fiji might want to join, but for some reason they didn’t (New Zealand showed interest, took a raincheck and never called us back). Smaller colonies were convinced that big ones like New South Wales and Victoria would end up running the show, while the labour movement worried that it might distract everyone from industrial reform.

There was also the problem of what model we were to follow in federating the colonies. The United States had managed to unify their colonies – but they did so through a bloody revolution, and becoming a republic. Canada seemed a promising candidate, but it was thought to be too highly centralised, which brought out the paranoia of smaller colonies all over again. Switzerland was another possibility, but it had pretty much followed the American model anyway.

In the end, the United States was the obvious model, and we did a bit of a mix-and-match – using the US Constitution as a guide, while retaining the Westminster system, and passing on the revolution and the republic. Like the United States, Australia leaves a few big things in the hands of the federal government, while allowing the states the freedom to handle a whole raft of smaller things. We both have a Lower House and a Senate, and the most obviously American thing of all – our colonies became states, not provinces or cantons or counties or regions or departments.

One of the early supporters of Federation was a New South Wales lawyer and politician named Edmund Barton (Toby to his friends since childhood, for reasons I have been unable to ascertain). Barton had early on shown political promise when he umpired a cricket match between England and New South Wales which turned ugly, resulting in international cricket’s first riot (Banjo Paterson was amongst the rioters who invaded the pitch). Barton showed presence of mind in defusing the situation, and it is thought this helped him first become elected to the Legislative Assembly.

Barton was leader of the federal movement in New South Wales, and addressed nearly 300 meetings in both city and country, helped draft the Constitution, travelled to London to explain the federation bill to the British Government, and campaigned for federalism when the issue went to referendum. It was a total no-brainer to practically everyone that when a caretaker Prime Minister was appointed, it should be Barton, the leading federalist of the oldest state.

However it wasn’t quite so clear-cut to the first Governor-General, Lord Hopetoun, who asked the Premier of New South Wales, Sir William Lyne, to become the first Prime Minister. He doesn’t seem to have asked anyone’s opinion or gauged the public mood, and everybody had a fit, because Sir William had been the main opponent of federalism until he suddenly changed sides at the last minute once he realised that federation was definitely happening. Hopetoun blindly followed the protocol used by Canada, and it was such a disastrous decision that it has gone down in history as The Hopetoun Blunder.

After some rather tense negotiating, Lyne handed back his commission and Hopetoun swore Edmund Barton in as Australia’s first Prime Minister in Centennial Park, Sydney, on New Year’s Day 1901, and all his ministry as well – which included Sir William Lyne as Minister for Home Affairs.

One of the first tasks was to organise the first general election, which took place on March 29-30, and was different to today’s elections – voting was voluntary (about 60% voted), the first-past-the-post system was used, and every state had its own laws, so in some places women and Aborigines were allowed to vote, and in others they weren’t. No party won outright, but Barton’s Protectionist Party was able to govern with the support of the Labor Party, and it was felt that the nation’s first election had gone extremely well.

I remember some years ago (I think for the Centenary of Federation), there was a television advertisement which noted that many Australians didn’t know who their first prime minister was, although most knew that George Washington was the first president of the United States. Rather than decrying this failure in our education, the advertisement tried to make it seem like a good thing – apparently the lack of war made our first prime minister’s name forgettable.

Which is nonsense: plenty of other countries gained their first leaders without bloodshed, and I’m sure they know who they were. The Australian citizenship test used to ask who the first prime minister was, but this is no longer required. Feeble. (The US citizenship test still asks who the first US president was). No excuses – all Australians should know Edmund Barton was our first PM.

Barton is an English surname which comes from places named Barton in Lancashire, Staffordshire, Yorkshire and Kent, meaning “barley farm” in Old English. The one in Lancashire seems to be the earliest source of the surname. Barley was one of the first grains ever domesticated, and a staple food for peasants during medieval times. In fact, the word barn means “barley house”.

You may recall that A.B. “Banjo” Paterson, national poet and cricket rioter, was related to Edmund Barton through his mother, who was born Rose Barton. Paterson’s initials stood for Andrew Barton, and as his father was named Andrew, he went by his middle name, being known as Barty to his friends. The name Barton would be a good way to honour not only our first prime minister, but our favourite poet as well. You could use the Simpsonian Bart as the nickname, but I favour Paterson’s choice of Barty, which fits in with popular choices like Archie.

Name Combinations for Barton

Barton Aloysius, Barton Earle, Barton George, Barton Oswald, Barton Ramsay, Barton Thomas

Brothers for Barton

Arthur, Griffith, Reid, Stanley, Theodore, Winston

Sisters for Barton

Adelaide, Eliza, Ivy, Lucinda, Nell, Pearl

Note: Middle names and sibling names taken from names related to the Federation of Australia, and the lives of the early Prime Ministers

POLL RESULT: Barton received an approval rating of 53%. 29% of people thought it was a good name, but nobody loved it.

(Photo shows crowds filling Centennial Park in Sydney for the Federation Day celebrations of 1901)

Name Update: They Completely Changed Their Minds

28 Saturday Dec 2013

Posted by A.O. in Name Updates

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

choosing baby names, dog names, name combinations, nicknames, surname names, zodiac names

sag1

Louise and Ross planned on naming their first child Barnaby, but were worried that their pet dog Barney would clash with this, or make it seem ridiculous. Louise wrote in to ask for people’s opinions, and also to see whether they liked their second choice for a name, Jasper, any better.

When they went to the hospital, they were quite convinced that their baby’s name was either going to be Barnaby or Jasper – they even considered Barnaby Jasper or Jasper Barnaby as options. However, once their little boy was born, something happened – they both knew that neither of those names was right for him! They looked into his eyes, and he didn’t seem like a Jasper or a Barnaby at all.

Louise explains: We both love Barnaby and like Jasper, but as it turned out, we didn’t love or like those names for our son. They were perfect on paper, and would be lovely for someone else, but not for our baby.

They started their whole name search again from scratch, but this time it seemed much easier, because it was a practical exercise, rather than a theoretical one. Suddenly all kinds of names they had earlier rejected seemed possible.

Within two days of leaving hospital they had decided on a name, and their son is

ARCHER LENNOX.

The name Archer suggested itself because their son’s zodiac sign is Sagittarius, and Lennox is a family surname which gives Lenny as a “back up” name if needed. Louise and Ross are big believers in Plans B!

They have had mostly positive feedback from friends and family, who have nearly all immediately dubbed the baby “Archie“. Louise and Ross are completely happy with the choice they made, although things didn’t work out exactly as they expected.

Congratulations to Louise and Ross on their first child, who has a handsome name even if it did come as a bit of a surprise!

Remember that it’s a great idea to take a little list of possible names to the birth of your child, but you’re not obligated to stick with any of the names after the baby is born. It’s just a list, not a contract, and you are completely free to change your minds.

Have you written into the blog with a name dilemma and then changed your minds once the baby was born? We don’t mind a bit if you ignored our opinions, or went in a completely different direction – we just want to know that you’re happy with the name you eventually chose. Send us your name updates! 

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