• About
  • Best Baby Names
  • Celebrity Baby Names
  • Celebrity Baby Names – Current
  • Celebrity Baby Names – Past
  • Featured Boys Names
  • Featured Girls Names
  • Featured Unisex Names
  • Links to Name Data
  • Waltzing on the Web

Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Tag Archives: name combinations

This or That?

16 Sunday Dec 2012

Posted by A.O. in Your Questions Answered

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

Biblical names, celebrity baby names, choosing baby names, classic names, Eleanor Nickerson, faux-Celtic names, Irish names, name combinations, name popularity, nicknames, popular names, retro names, scandinavian names, Scottish names, surname names, unisex names, vocabulary words

l_2048_1536_55BA4ECF-57A0-4861-954A-D5C549924414After considering all the possible baby names, and a few impossible ones just for good measure, sometimes you end up with two or three names that you love equally, and just can’t choose between them.

Many people searched the Internet to discover which of their final options would make the better choice, and somehow stumbled upon this blog.

I decided to answer their questions, and found that quite often the name that seemed “better” wasn’t the name I liked best, or that I would choose.

Perhaps that is the lesson to be learnt here – not to look for the name which ticks the most boxes, or which fulfils more of your preferences, but the one which satisfies your heart the most.

When there is no right or wrong answer, how do you decide between the last two names on your list?

Adele or Adeline?

Classic Adele is the safer choice, and retro Adeline the more daring choice. I think I would be tempted to go with Adeline.

Riley or Caleb?

I would go for the Biblical name, as having more history behind it, and say Caleb.

Ryan or Dylan?

You ask which one sounds as if it is in a higher socio-economic group. To me, both seem fairly average or “normal”, and I don’t think I could pick one over another.

Rocco or Frankie?

Rocco – it’s rapidly increasing in popularity while still underused. Frankie is more fashionable as a feminine name now (if that bothers you).

Chloe or Lily?

Both are extremely popular, but I would say Chloe is the safer choice, as it has been Top 100 since the 1980s and only just peaked. Chloe also has a classical background, and is popular with all classes. Despite that, I prefer Lily.

Lillian or Clara?

I’d go with Clara, simply because it isn’t in the Top 100 yet and Lillian is.

Clara or Kayla?

Definitely Clara – Kayla doesn’t have the history behind her that Clara does, and is on her way out.

Clara or Zara?

I think I’m going to have to back Clara again, just to be consistent.

Zara or Allegra?

I love Allegra, but I have to admit she’s a risky choice, since she does seem to be getting quite trendy as a celebrity baby name. My heart says Allegra, but my head says Zara.

Charlie or Jack?

I’d go with Jack if you want a classic name that is definitely masculine, and is a short form that has been long established as a full name. Charlie is very cute though.

James or Hamish?

James is the safer choice, being a classic that’s never left the Top 20. Hamish is a bit riskier, but if you want something obviously Scottish, then Hamish is your boy.

Hunter or Archer?

I prefer Archer, because you get Archie as a nickname. If you hate nicknames, then Hunter is probably more appropriate.

Evalyn or Aveline?

You ask which one sounds “lovelier”; in my opinion, it is Aveline. However, I think Evelyn is lovelier than Aveline. Can I interest you in Evelyn?

Emmie or Emma?

You ask which one sounds “softer”; to me, Emma sounds softer.

Indie or Milla?

Even though Milla is Top 100 and Indie doesn’t chart, I’m going to say Milla. This is because if all the spelling variants were combined, I think Indie would be Top 100 as well. To me, Milla seems more distinctive.

Amelia or Matilda?

These are both safe choices, although if popularity bothers you, you should know that Amelia is probably heading for the #1 spot, which she already holds in the UK.

Annie or Matilda?

If you want something less popular, yet which has been stable for many years, then pick Annie. If you would prefer a non-nickname choice, then go with Matilda.

Josephine, Violet or Mathilda?

Josephine is the safest choice, and Mathilda seems trendiest because Scandinavian-type names are coming into fashion. I think Violet is the prettiest. You could use all three, because Josephine Violet Mathilda is really nice as a name combination.

Josephine or Audrey?

Both classic names, but Josephine is more stable, and isn’t in the Top 100. I find Audrey really adorable though, so I’m going to go against the sensible advice and say Audrey. If you’re feeling sensible, pick Josephine.

Elsie or Josie?

Definitely Elsie – it’s fashionable, increasing steadily in popularity, and Eleanor Nickerson tips it to become the next Evie in the UK.

Luella or Eloise?

Eloise is the more stylish and safer choice, but Luella is sweeter.

Eloise or Matilda?

I think Eloise is the clear winner here, because it’s still at the bottom of the Top 100, and seems more up-and-coming.

Matilda or Helen?

Classic Helen has been stable for decades, and peaked in the 1940s, suggesting she may be due for a comeback in about ten years or so. I’d be inclined to be brave and choose Helen.

Max or Darcy?

Max is by far the safer choice, as Darcy is losing popularity as other surname names take its place. I think I like Darcy better though.

Max Archie or Max Oscar?

When I hear “Max Oscar“, I immediately visualise a gigantic Academy Award statue, so I prefer Max Archie.

Oscar or Lucas?

Oscar – Lucas is just about to hit its peak.

Finn or Lewis?

Lewis if you want a classic name that’s less popular, Finn if you’re looking for an Irish heritage choice.

Kallan or Flynn?

Flynn – I don’t like it when names randomly start with a K instead of a C.

Taj or Kyan?

Taj. I’ve noticed faux-Celtic names like Kyan tend to have a short shelf life and date quickly.

Keira or Kirra?

Oh, go for the Australian choice and pick Kirra – be patriotic.

Sibella or Imogen?

Sibella, although much less popular, seems more trendy, and may get lost amongst the other Bella names, so I would pick Imogen.

Maisie or Matilda?

I love Maisie, she’s so sweet and charming, and seems much fresher than Matilda, so that would be my preference.

Matilda or Lilah?

Matilda – I don’t like that spelling of Lila, which makes no sense to me.

Jett or Jet?

Tough call. I think I might be tempted to go with vocabulary word Jet, which seems more fashion-forward.

Jai or Jye?

Jai – it seems more like a real name.

Jett, Levi or Jai?

Levi. Probably because it stands out pitted against two names starting with J.

Adelaide and Tasman: Birth Announcements from Melbourne (November)

14 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Adelaide and Tasman: Birth Announcements from Melbourne (November)

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

610548-green-moonTwins

Chelsea Elizabeth and Logan Reed (Seth)

Luca Samuel and Cole Jacob (Lachlan, Finn)

 

Girls

Adelaide Hendy (Harry)

Allegra Rose

Angelina Tatijana

Asher Oleara (Alex, Tilly)

Clare Texas

Eiowyn

Giselle Claudia (Dante)

Grace Sarah Mae (Daniel)

Madison Joan Ellen

Matilda Rose Lauren (Ziggy)

Mia Bernadette

Nina Faith Mary (Callen, Nathaniel, Benjamin, Nicolette, Zoe, William, Georgina)

Sheridan Li

Trinity Snow (Tylor)

Viera Ayla

 

Boys

Archer St. Quintin Miles “Archie” (Zoe)

Ashton Alden Jude

Caleb Ross Francis

Clayton Maurice (Maxwell)

Eoin Finbar

Ezra Peniamina (Samuel, Abigail)

Harrison William Jarvis

Jobe Ahti (Kelsey, Reeve, Callan, Tommy)

Kayden Brian Aubrey (Logan, Dekyn)

Lennon Steven Michael

Mitchell Edward William

Oakley Jessy Matthew (Ruby, Indy)

Oliver Cain (Vaughn, Xavier)

Tasman William “Tulley”

William Trevor Kenneth

(Photo shows this year’s Melbourne Cup, won by Green Moon)

Ingrid and Cai: Birth Announcements from Hobart (November)

14 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

runnymedeGirls

Ashton Louise (Miley)

Edith Kate

Eva Kathleen

Florence Pearl (Beatrix)

Hannah Joy Louisa

Indigo Erica

Ingrid May

Isla Jane (Alec)

Ruth Lorraine

Taylah Joyce Charli (Sophie, Phillip)

 

Boys

Alistair Colin

Asher Frank (Imala)

Cai Lloyd Michael

Cody Roy (Jack, Jesse, Aimee, Laura)

Ewan Raymond (Ada)

Frederick Edward

Judd Andrew

Lachlan Peter John

Nash William

Sterling Geoffrey

(Picture shows Runnymede House, a historic home and garden in Hobart open to the public; photo from Around You)

Famous Names: Neptune and Taylor

12 Wednesday Dec 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

astronomical names, english names, Etruscan names, fairy tales, famous namesakes, historical records, honouring, Indo-European names, Irish names, Italian names, Latin words, locational names, mythological names, name combinations, name history, name meaning, name popularity, names of ships, nicknames, Roman names, surname names, UK name popularity, unisex names, US name popularity

seals on neptuneAt the end of November, the Premier of South Australia announced that the Neptune Islands Group Marine Park would be renamed the Neptune Islands Group (Ron and Valerie Taylor) Marine Park. This is no mere change of name, for a network of 19 marine parks has taken effect in order to protect the seas from over-fishing. The premier noted that the southern oceans had more diversity than the Great Barrier Reef, and contained many plants and animals that cannot be found anywhere else.

The marine park has been named in honour of Ron and Valerie Taylor; divers, film-makers, shark experts, and conservationists who were ardent proponents of preserving marine habitats. Their skills in underwater filming were used on such films as Jaws and The Blue Lagoon, but more importantly, they wrote books and made documentaries to highlight the beauty and fragility of marine ecology. They won many awards for both photography and conservation. Ron passed away this year, and Valerie continues to be an advocate for marine protection.

The Neptune Islands, near Port Lincoln, were named by the navigator and cartographer Matthew Flinders in 1802. Rugged and remote, they seemed to him inaccessible, as if they would would always belong to King Neptune.

Neptune is the English form of Neptunus, the Roman god of fresh water springs, lakes, rivers, and the sea; he is the Roman equivalent of the Greek god Poisedon. He was worshipped in a festival that fell at the height of summer, when rainfall was at its lowest, and water most needed and valuable. As you know, his name has been given to the eighth planet from the Sun.

The meaning and origin of his name is obscure, with etymologists in disagreement over which language/s Neptune might be derived from. The general view is that it means something like “moistness”, “damp, wet”, “clouds, fog”, or “to water, irrigate”.

Another theory is that it is from the Italian town of Nepi, north of Rome, which was anciently known as Nepet or Nepete. This town is famous for its mineral springs, and traditionally connected to the god Neptune, who would presumably have approved of its watery wonders.

The town’s name is Etruscan, from the Etruscan name for Neptune, which was Nethuns. This may be related to the Irish god Nechtan, who had a sacred well, and thus another liquid connection. In fact there are several Indo-European deities with similar names and aqueous roles, and it is speculated that their names may go back to an ancient word meaning “nephew, grandson”.

One of the ships of the Second Fleet was called Neptune, and unfortunately it had the worst reputation of all for its appalling mistreatment of convicts.

Neptune sounds as if it should be ultra rare in Australian name records, but there are quite a few from the 19th century – at least quite a few more than I expected to find. It was mostly used in the middle, such as Cecil Neptune, and Samuel Caesar Neptune, but you can also find men named Neptune Persse and Neptune Frederick. Two of them rejoiced in the full names of Neptune Love and Neptune Blood; I believe the name Neptune is traditional in the Blood family.

Neptune would be very unusual as a baby name today, and I can’t quite imagine what you would use as a nickname – Neppy sounds too much like “nappy” to me. At the very least, please not Tuna.

A complete change of pace brings us to the name Taylor, a very common English surname referring to someone who made clothes as their occupation; the word tailor is ultimately from the Latin talea, meaning “a cutting”. In the Middle Ages, tailoring was a high-status craft, as only the wealthy could afford to have their clothing professionally made, and tailors could command good fees. Both men and women were employed as tailors.

There are many folk tales and fairy stories about tailors, and nearly always the tailor is depicted as being extremely clever, and confidently able to outwit others. Tailors having to be so precise and painstaking in their work, and no doubt with plenty of diplomatic skill to handle their rich clients, they must have gained a reputation for being as sharp as pins and as smooth-talking as silk.

The earliest Taylor-as-a-first-name I can find in the records is from the 16th century, and it was on a female. This may be an error in transcription, as subsequent early Taylors seem to be male (with plenty of girls who had Taylor as a middle name). In the United States, Taylor has always charted as a boy’s name, and only charts for girls from the late 1970s onwards, but is currently Top 100 for girls, and in the 300s for boys. In the UK, it only charts for boys, where it is barely on the Top 100 and falling.

In Australia, Taylor has charted for both boys and girls since the 1980s, when it was #383 for boys and #785 for girls. It peaked for both sexes in the 1990s, when it was #38 for girls and #130 for boys. At the moment, Taylor is only just outside the Top 100 for girls at #108, is #251 for boys, and falling for both sexes.

So that’s a quick survey of Taylor popularity around the world: Top 100 for girls in the US, Top 100 for boys in the UK, and not on the Top 100 at all in Australia.

Here are two very different names which evoke the sea and honour its protectors, as well as having a strong connection to the history of South Australia.

(Picture shows seals on Neptune Island; photo from Flickr)

Sage and Arlo: Birth Announcements from Canberra (November)

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

remembranceTwins

Charlie James and Olivia Paige

Leo Samuel and Maxwell James (Alex)

 

Girls

Abigail Susanne (Jacqueline, Sophie)

Cecilia Elizabeth (Georgia)

Darya Dot

Eleanor Amelie “Ellie”

Electra Rose (Cyrano)

Lucinda Gloria (Chloe, Milo)

Nicole Lee Mary

Piper Lara (Paddy, Josie)

Sage Ella

Zara Aleksandra (Siena)

 

Boys

Alexander Tomasi James (Amelia)

Arlo (Indigo, Atticus)

Carter Liam Franklyn (Olivia, Henry)

Heath Lindsay

Lawrence Archer

Mason Walter (Anabella)

Simon Neil

Tanner Markos

Toby Charles

Wil Christopher

(Photo shows a decorated war veteran placing poppies on the Roll of Honour at the War Memorial for Remembrance Day; photo from ABC News)

Elke and Otto: Birth Announcements from Sydney (November)

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Elke and Otto: Birth Announcements from Sydney (November)

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

DSC_0667Girls

Alexis Charlize (Sienna)

Alice Lynne Grace

Amy May

Elke Patricia

Emily Catherine Anne (Matthew)

Freya Louise (Charlie)

Harley Eve

Kalani Ann (Noah, Cooper)

Kyah Shiylowe

Phoebe Joanne (Hamish)

Boys

Bryce (Connor, Shaleah, Kourtney)

Edward Nian Xi

Finn (Lockie)

Harrison James

Henry Thomas (Bonnie)

Kye David

Otto Hugh Edmund (Rupert, Fergus)

Riley Lennox

Thomas Rodney (William)

Zane Eden (Andre, Leon, Joel, Beau, Carl, Evan, Theo)

(Picture is of the annual Sculpture by the Sea exhibition at Bondi which finished in November; photo from their website)

Name Update: Miss Isadora Waltzes In!

03 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Updates

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

choosing baby names, name combinations, sibsets

isadoraEmily and David found choosing a name for a second child a bit harder than for a first, and Emily wrote in because she was having doubts about a couple of names on their shortlist.

After receiving lots of helpful answers, the shortlist was whittled down to just two names, and they decided to wait until the baby was born before making the final choice.

Their daughter was born last month, and her name is:

I$ADORA MATH!LDE

little sister to Clementine.

Cressida was the front-runner on the list, but once their little girl arrived, they could see that she was an Isadora. Emily and David absolutely love her name, and have received several compliments on it already.

I can understand why, because Isadora is a gorgeous name, and goes beautifully with Mathilde, as well as being a lovely match with her sister.

Congratulations on your new daughter, Emily and David, and good work on choosing the perfect baby name!

(Photo shows an album cover for a band named Isadora)

Arkie and Sapphire: Birth Announcements from Rural and Regional Areas (October)

30 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

681x454Twins

Aleisha Kate and Paige Anne (Shania)

John Patrick and Thomas Ronan

Oliver Aiden and Emmett John

Ryan Trent and Travis Luke (Hayley)

Theodore Ean and Henry Ronald (Elizabeth, George)

 

Girls

Airlie Laykyn

Arkie Mayumi Ivory (Minami)

Aurelia Joan

Cassidy Estelle

Celeste Frances

Ciara Rose (Rylea)

Eadie Hope (Grace-Louise, Ella)

Elsie Victoria May

Emjay

Frankie Jean-Louise

Harriet Kay (Jude)

Hazel Josephine

Isoebella Glenna Lisbeth (Lukas)

Juliette Florence (Charlton)

Kailin Charli

Laura George

Logan (Kobee, Pacee)

Lottie Olive (Mabel)

Miriam Ruth

Morgan Hayley Melissa Jane

Priya Jane (Rohan)

Ruby Deborah Anne (Zadian)

Sapphire Elizabeth (Hannah, Ezekiel, Sophia, Esther)

Scarlett Ruby

Vaydah Louise (Sharnie, Georgia, Madalyn)

 

Boys

Archer Robin (Lilyana, Jensen)

Austin Sean Harrold

Braxton Ross Kingsley (Ryder, Lacey)

Bryn Alan

Chaz Harrison (Ava, Izzy)

Corbin James Gugil

Crawford Ash

Dash Thomas (Scarlett)

Dayne Stirling James (Akaysha)

Diesel James

Ernest William (James)

Harrison Charles Patrick (Josh, Nick, Jordy, Riley)

Jacob John Edward

Jesse Chance (Dusty, Ella, Tex)

Kolt Sydney

Lincoln Kane (Royce)

Nate Davey Ross (Elyssa)

Samson Leo (Dahlia, Riahni, Amy)

Talis Connor (Lane, Riley)

Tim Dazzling

Toby Karsten (Ella, Ben, Lucy)

Ty Reece Leigh (Jayden)

Walker Zane (Mali, Laikin)

William Arthur (Cordelia, Eleanor)

Zebastian Joseph

(Picture shows the Whitsunday Islands in Queensland; photo from Lonely Planet)

Famous Names: Sandy and Sable

28 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

African-American names, animal names, colour names, english names, French names, French vocabulary words, Google Earth, Google Maps, historical records, Hurricane Sandy, Mer de Noms, name combinations, name history, name meaning, name trends, names of hurricanes, names of ships, nature names, nicknames, Paradise Lost, rare names, Southern Surveyor, The New York Times, Times Atlas of the World, unisex names, University of Sydney, US National Geophysical Data Center, vocabulary names, Wikipedia

A group of Australian scientists from the University of Sydney have undiscovered an island that was supposed to be in between Australia and New Caledonia.

Sandy Island showed up on Google Earth and Google Maps, as well as marine and scientific maps all over the world, including the US National Geophysical Data Center. According to the maps, Sandy Island was about 16 miles long and 3 miles wide – just slightly bigger than Manhattan.

Geologists on the Southern Surveyor, an Australian maritime research vessel, were puzzled by the island which appeared on their weather maps, yet navigation charts showed that the water in that area was very deep – 1400 metres (4620 feet). They decided that they had to go check it out, and found nothing there except sea. The scientists recorded the information so that maps can be changed.

According to the Wikipedia article on Sandy Island, the island was erased from Google Maps on November 26, but although the name Sandy Island doesn’t show up in the search bar, when I looked in the Coral Sea I found the phantom island quite easily, but there was no name attached to it.

If I zoomed in on the island, it simply disappeared, and if I switched to satellite, the island showed up as a black streak surrounded by blue streaks, looking remarkably like someone had scribbled on it with two different felt-tip pens.

Interestingly, if Sandy Island had existed, it would have been in French territorial waters – and the island is not on any recent French government charts. Perhaps because of this, the Times Atlas of the World deleted Sandy Island from its maps after 1999.

The history of the discovery of Australia involved – indeed, was dependent on – faulty maps, necessitating voyages to check out what was here or not, so it makes a strange sort of sense that now Australians must voyage forth to check faulty maps for themselves.

The episode shows that this part of the world is still not well known, and incompletely charted. It’s not quite a matter of Here be dragons, but the reply from most of the map-providers when the error was pointed out was along the lines of, Well it is in the middle of nowhere …

Tens of thousands of years of human occupation, and centuries since the first mapping, and we’re still close to the middle of nowhere. Which is rather exciting – what else in our region is still waiting to be discovered, or undiscovered?

Apart from the Pythonesque nuttiness of this story (no wonder the geologists got the giggles as they sailed through the invisible island), the thing that got my attention was the name Sandy, which has been in the news internationally since Hurricane Sandy hit the north-east coast of the United States in late October, after devastating the Caribbean.

According to this article in The New York Times, names of hurricanes can help to influence the way we name our babies. It’s not as simple as everyone suddenly choosing Sandy as a baby name, but it seems that once we hear a word or a name many times, we instinctively like names that sound similar to it. So experts are expecting a spike in the numbers of babies of 2012 whose names begin with an S, as well as those with an and sound in them, and ones that end in -ee.

There was a story in the Australian press, about an expat couple in New York, whose baby arrived at the height of Sandy’s fury. The parents did consider calling their new daughter Sandy, but in the end chose Sophie. The analysts would be rubbing their hands, because they chose a two-syllable name that starts with S and ends with an -ee sound, just like Sandy.

Sandy is a unisex name which is short for Alexander or Alexandra, but also for any name related to them, such as Alistair, Sander, Alessandra, Sanette, Sandrine, or Sandra. You could use it as a short form of Cassandra, Santos, Sanford, Sandon, Santiago or any similar name. Sandy is a traditional pet name for people with reddish or sandy-blonde hair, and you could see it as a vocabulary, colour, and nature name meaning “sand-coloured, like sand, covered in sand”.

However, another possibility occurred to me while reading about The Case of the Non-Existent Island. On a French chart from 1875, the island is called Île de Sables, which is French for Sandy Island. Because of this, The Times Atlas of the World partly Anglicised the name back again to Sable Island.

While in French, sable means “sand”, the same word in English means something quite different. (I feel that I must be channelling Lou from Mer de Noms, who quite often finds name inspiration in French words). I should point out that the two words are said differently: in French, SAH-bluh; in English, SAY-buhl.

A sable is a species of marten (a relative of minks, weasels and ferrets) which is found mostly in Eurasia and still hunted in Russia. The pelt of the animal has been highly valued since medieval times, because the fur of the sable feels soft whichever way you stroke you; it’s not possible to “go against the grain”.

Because of the animal’s colour, the word sable is also a literary way to say “black”, such as when John Milton refers to “a sable cloud” in Paradise Lost. It amuses me that sandy and sable are opposites as colours, with one signifying a pale shade and the other one that is very dark.

Sable can also be used as a personal name, with the first one I can find in the records dating to the 17th century. It’s used for both boys and girls, although from the beginning more often a female name – maybe because it seems like it could be short for names such as Isabel or Sabella.

Sable is more common in the United States, where it has sometimes been used amongst African-Americans as a positive and beautiful word to denote darkness (similar to the name Ebony, which doesn’t have that connotation here).

In Australia, it appears rarely in the records, nearly always as a female name. One of my favourite combinations for this name was Brightie Sable. It also belonged to a 1900s French immigrant to Australia, who had the French form – Sablé.

So if you feel subconsciously influenced to use a name similar to Sandy, or would like to be part of a name trend, then Sable or Sablé seem like possibilities to choose from, and may please trend analysts immensely.

(Satellite image from Google Maps)

Posy and Dempsey: Birth Announcements from Hobart (October)

23 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

 

Twins

Maggie Lee and Pippa May (Archie)

 

Girls

Amelia Vicki (Isabella)

Beatrice Ellen (Ailish, Lily, Fred)

Frankie Michelle (Xavier)

Jemima Rose (Gretel)

Joy Taria

Lila Grace (Riley, Logan)

Madeline Ada Rose

Maeve Adele

Posy Fay (Louis, Jemima)

Sofia Isabelle Nancy

 

Boys

Alby Neville

Archer Kevin Lucas

Bernard Michael

Bobby Robert Daniel

Charles Lawrence “Charlie” (Harry, Sabrina)

Dempsey Allanby

James Mason (Huntar)

Jobe Hudson (Georgia, Bryce, Thomas, Harvey)

Kruiz Daniel

Yianni (Harry, Antonia, Alexia, Georgio)

(Picture of spring lambs in Tasmania; photo from 936 ABC Hobart’s Facebook page)

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Enter your email address to follow this blog

Categories

Archives

Recent Comments

A.O.'s avatarwaltzingmorethanmati… on Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang…
Madelyn's avatarMadelyn on Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang…
JD's avatardrperegrine on Can Phoebe Complete This …
A.O.'s avatarwaltzingmorethanmati… on Rua and Rhoa
redrover23's avatarredrover23 on Rua and Rhoa

Blogroll

  • Appellation Mountain
  • Baby Name Pondering
  • Babynamelover's Blog
  • British Baby Names
  • Clare's Name News
  • For Real Baby Names
  • Geek Baby Names
  • Name Candy
  • Nameberry
  • Nancy's Baby Names
  • Ren's Baby Name Blog
  • Sancta Nomina
  • Swistle: Baby Names
  • The Art of Naming
  • The Baby Name Wizard
  • The Beauty of Names
  • Tulip By Any Name

RSS Feed

  • RSS - Posts

RSS Posts

  • Celebrity Baby News: Melanie Vallejo and Matt Kingston
  • Names from the TV Show “Cleverman”
  • Can Phoebe Complete This Sibset?
  • Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang Winter
  • Baby, How Did You Get That Name?
  • Celebrity Baby News: Media Babies
  • Celebrity Baby News: Adelaide Crows Babies
  • Celebrity Baby News: Chris and Rebecca Judd
  • Names at Work: Name News From the World of Business and Employment
  • Celebrity Baby News: Sporting Round Up

Currently Popular

  • Celebrity Baby News: Mick and Angie Molloy
  • Girls Names From Stars and Constellations
  • Rare Boys Names From the 1950s
  • Celebrity Baby News: Rachael Finch and Michael Miziner
  • The Top 100 Names of the 1940s in New South Wales

Tags

celebrity baby names celebrity sibsets english names famous namesakes fictional namesakes honouring locational names middle names name combinations name history name meaning name popularity name trends nicknames popular names saints names sibsets surname names twin sets unisex names

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Waltzing More Than Matilda
    • Join 517 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Waltzing More Than Matilda
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...