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Tag Archives: name combinations

Memphis Paul: Birth Announcements from Brisbane and Darwin (August/September)

19 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

 

Girls

Abby Elizabeth (Joshua)

Calista Eloise May (Aiden, Zachariah)

Cara Estelle

Chloe Rose (Camille)

Emma Grace (Jack, Charlotte)

Holly Jane (Rhys, Liam)

Jenna Jean (Keeley, Lachlan)

Jessica Ann (Jack)

Matilda Dolly

Scarlet Mary (Will)

 

Boys

Ben Stephen

Edison Clarke (Stella, Isla)

Harrison Dominic (Georgia)

Jameson Ronald

Joshua Samuel (Ethan, Hannah)

Leo Alfio (Mia, Eva)

Lochlann Reid (Sheridyn, Simon)

Louis George “Louie” (Will, Alexander)

Maxwell James Nigel (Blake, Olivia, Claudia)

Memphis Paul (Savannah)

(Picture is of trees lit up for the Darwin Festival; photo from the Au Review)

Name News Round-Up

13 Saturday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Names in the News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Australian Aboriginal names, baby name superstitions, birth records, birth registries, changing a baby's name, choosing baby names, locational names, name changes, name combinations, name meanings, name popularity, name trends, nicknames, popular names, vintage names

I’ve read quite a few odd little snippets abut names in the news, and the holidays seems like a good opportunity to share them.

The same names popular across New South Wales

Data from the NSW Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages shows that most areas followed the same name trends last year, despite cultural and ethnic differences. One of the major exceptions to the rule was the name Aaliyah, which is #77 across the state, but a Top Ten name in Blacktown, in Sydney’s western suburbs. At the public hospitals of Royal North Shore and Royal Prince Alfred, Oliver and Chloe were the most popular names; Olivia was the favourite name at Westmead, St George and Nepean hospitals, while Isabella topped the girl’s list at Randwick, Blacktown and Liverpool hospitals. Ethan was #1 in Liverpool, while the Central Coast was the only region to appreciate Cooper in significant numbers. Amelia proved an across-the-board favourite in almost every region, only failing to make the Top Ten in Newcastle, St Leonards, Central Coast and Blacktown.

Lismore bucks the trend

Despite this uniformity, up in Lismore in the state’s far north, they pride themselves on doing things a little differently, including baby names. In the Northern Rivers region, the most popular baby names are Riley and Mia (#20 and #5 in the state respectively). Cooper is the #2 boy’s name in Lismore, adding weight to the idea that it is coastal areas which tend to go for this name. Grace is #4 in Lismore, although #14 in the state.

Baby name regret, 1909 style

This is a story sent in by a reader to one of those columns where people send in their odd little stories.

The Unthank family of Somerville welcomed their baby daughter Hazel Ethel in 1909. Today Somerville is a suburb of Melbourne, but back then it was a rural orchard town. In order to register his daughter’s birth, Mr Unthank had to drive 10 km (6 miles) by horse and carriage to Hastings, a bustling seaside town (now another suburb).

On his way to the registry office, he dropped into the local pub to visit his wife’s family, who owned the pub, and share the good news. They all had a few drinks, and decided Hazel Ethel wasn’t suitable after all. They picked a new name, wrote it down on a piece of paper, and Mr Unthank continued his journey.

When Mr Unthank got home, he casually told his wife that he and her sisters had changed the baby’s name, but unfortunately he couldn’t remember what it was, as he had handed the slip of paper to the registrar and thought no more about it.

It was six weeks before they could find the time to visit their relatives again, and in the meantime, they had no idea what their daughter’s name was. They just called her Bubby. Eventually, they discovered her name was Zalie Vivienne Unthank, but for the rest of her life, Zalie was known by her family as Bub.

Perhaps not so strangely, both Hazel and Zalie now sound perfectly suitable as contemporary baby names. Do you think her dad and aunties made the right choice for 1909? And which one sounds better today?

(You can see the birth record for Zalie here, where her name is given as Zalie Vyvian).

Baby name superstitions

In a newspaper article from Tasmania dated 1936, it is claimed that in times gone by, it was considered lucky to choose a baby’s name before it was born. The name had to be chosen in the first nine days after birth, or it would be an unlucky child. The article unfortunately doesn’t say how long ago these superstitions were in effect.

The town that got its name back

This isn’t about baby names, but I checked my blog’s title, and it says it is about Australian names, not just baby or even people names.

The town of Mutchilba in far north Queensland is on the small side, but famed for its mangoes. In 1999, the town was quietly downgraded and removed from the map. The population of Mutchilba was (statistically speaking) moved to swell the ranks of nearby Dimbulah, which has the same postcode.

It’s said that life moves at a slower pace in the tropical heat, and perhaps that explains why the good people of Mutchilba failed to notice the change in status to their little town until July of this year. Perhaps nobody bought any new maps in the interim. Certainly nobody bothered telling them.

However, when the local paper published an article informing them of what had occurred, they were hopping mad, and launched a campaign to get their town back.

I’m happy to say they were successful, and as of October 12 this year, Mutchilba is now officially a town once more. Queensland Natural Resources and Mines Minister Andrew Cripps says the State Government fast-tracked the process, and that he took personal interest in the case, being from the far north himself.

The mayor of Mutchilba is now hoping to re-launch the Mutchilba Mango Mardi Gras, the annual festival celebrating the mango harvest, as a means of highlighting the town’s unique identity.

Mutchilba has a lovely meaning in the local language – “place of many birds”.

Shiseido and Anker: Birth Announcements from Melbourne (September)

12 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

 

Twins

Dajan Roberts Gavin and Taylah Jennifer Gail (Alyssa)

Johnny and William

Leah Wendy and Megan Jean

Nicholas Frank and Alexander William

Phillipa and Charles

 

Girls

Airlie Belle

Alysia Melinda Dianne

Annabelle June Rose (Elijah)

Aurelia Lorelai (Atticus)

Chloe Marie Magdalena

Clementine Hawthorne

Cleo Elizabeth

Greta Louise (Harriet)

Hadley Fallon (Brody, Brand)

Indiana Summer Rose (Danae, Zane)

Isabella Chaya

Isla Monae (Marley)

Lorna Juliet (Eleanor)

Nancy Frances (Mylie)

Rose Amelie (Daniel, Matthew)

Shiseido Felicity Grace “Sass” (Georgia)

Tess Margaret

Tomine Ella Suki

Vivienne Eloise

Winifred Laidley (Lucy)

 

Boys

Alby Hugh (Van)

Anker Sol (Oscar)

Arlo Winston (Stella)

Brodie Sloane

Chace Garrard (Jaxon)

Declan Brian

Eddie James (Mia, Levi, Hugo)

Flynn Willow (Kaiyha, Janahli)

Kadel Dave (Tahli, Kobie)

Kip Raymond (Jack, Darcey)

Lex Ramses

Mac Aaron (Cupcake, Jimbo, Charli)

Otis Michael Harley (James)

Owen Alexander William

Rafferty Joseph (Augustus, Georgette, Willoughby)

Riordan Jay (Jaida, Rhianna)

Robin Anton Randolph (Anouk, Clovis)

Tai Philip (Blair)

Tyson Tirirangi (Atalia, Manaia)

Xander Bryce (Monique, Yasmine)

(Picture shows the Tesselaar Tulip Festival, held in the Dandenongs just outside Melbourne; photo from the festival’s website)

Silka and Zali: Birth Announcements from Hobart (September)

12 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Silka and Zali: Birth Announcements from Hobart (September)

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

 

Girls

Ashlynn Bea Lauren

Esther Nea

Florence May (Miles)

Harriet Ellen (Audrey)

Josie Margaret (Pascal, Rohan)

Ruby Jane (Kanisha, Charlie, Wyatt, Darcy)

Sienna Isabel (Nerissa, Denzel)

Silka Elise

Tiarna Joyce (Mikayla)

Zali Olive (Jed, Greer)

 

Boys

Alec Michael Charles

Archer William Hugh

Harley Vincent (Brayden, Zack, Noah, Piper)

Henry Bart (Max, Ruby)

Hugo George

Hunter Charles Patrick

Jason Paul (Justin, Emma)

Maxwell Joseph

Theodore Liam

William Wellington

(Picture shows cherry blossoms marking the start of spring in Tasmania; photo from Tasmania’s Facebook page)

Zo and Ziggy: Birth Announcements from Sydney (September)

05 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

Twins

Sebastian Willem and Mathias Clifford

 

Girls

Ainslie Ilma (Bradley, Brooke, Peyton)

Annabel Scarlett (Xavier)

Ava Charlize (Chace, Hayden)

Colette Anna

Isabella Margaret (Kurt, Shae, Charlotte)

Kitty Francesca (Harry, Eliza)

Skyler Sandy (Matisse, Jarrah)

Sybella Madeline (Dylan)

Talila Jade

Zo La (Mathieu)

 

Boys

Boston William Tyler

Euan Martin (Georgia)

Jeffery Django

Kip Benjamin

Lewis Richard John

Liam Edmund (Kathryn, Lachlan, Emily, Madeleine, Charlotte)

Mitchell Coventry (Tyler, Ashton, Flynn)

Thomas Yorke (Sophie)

Yanni Judah

Ziggy Jonah Winter

(Picture shows a whale kite at the Festival of the Winds on Bondi Beach on September 9, in which early spring breezes enable a spring kite festival; photo from the Daily Mail)

Ojas and Sasha: Birth Announcements from Canberra (September)

05 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ Comments Off on Ojas and Sasha: Birth Announcements from Canberra (September)

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

Twins

Sophie May and Zoe Jane (Emma)

 

Girls

Aislinn Ruby Blythe (Ethan)

Amelie Fleur

Eliza Clare (Hayden)

Gabriella Hope (Amelia, Imogen)

Genevieve Helena (Adeline)

Jade Daphne (Isla)

Jessie Rose (Jaden, Ari)

Nelly-Anne (Lennox)

Rosie Eileen (Oliver, Lucy, Archie)

Sierra Madeline

 

Boys

Angus Charles Bruce

Clancy Edward (Noah, Arlo)

Frank Brian Cooper

Jaxon Hiipa

Jonathan Norman “Jack” (Charlotte)

Kai Basil John (Maya)

Ojas

Ryker Scott John (Ayva)

Sasha Alexander (Anthony)

Zander David (Kaela)

(Picture shows flowers at Canberra’s Floriade, Australia’s biggest spring festival, which began in September; photo from festival website)

Name Update: Master Angus Waltzes In!

02 Tuesday Oct 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Updates

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

choosing baby names, name combinations, sibsets

Claire and Liam seemed as if they were running out of time to find a baby name, with two weeks to go, and no name agreed on. After their story was posted, the couple managed to choose a girl’s name quite easily, with either Tilda Eden or Mabel Eden decided upon. It was so easy that Claire was convinced the baby would be a boy, as they still hadn’t come up with any male names.

It turned out she was correct, as they welcomed their fourth child and third son on September 20, weighing a sturdy 4.1 kg (9lb 4oz). It took them a day and a half to think of a name for him, with their early choice Isaiah still a contender right up to the last minute. Liam suggested James, and Hunter was a genuine possibility, but in the end they chose

ANGU$ JERE*MY

baby brother to M@rty, J@sper and Be$$y.

Angus was the first name on Claire’s name list after Isaiah, and Liam and the children all liked it the best. Claire liked Angus because it sounds nice and strong, and easier to pronounce than Isaiah. The middle name is a family name. They’ve received very positive feedback from family and friends, who think it’s a good choice which fits in well with his siblings.

Congratulations to Claire and Liam for their new son, and for finding the perfect name for him, which has pleased everyone. It wasn’t that hard after all!

(Picture shows Glen Clova from the Angus Glens, in the Angus region of north-east Scotland; photo from Panaramio)

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).

Ocea and Lyric: Birth Announcements from Regional and Rural Areas (August)

28 Friday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twinsets

Twins

Drew Shelley and Hudson Stanley

Lexie Rose and Mae Winter (Willow)

Naomi Aibhlin and Elijah William

Stella Mary and Ivy Jade (Lachlan, Jameson)

Tazmyn Kate and Hannah Rose (Liam)

Zoe Rachel and Declan John (Sean)

 

Girls

Aurora Sage (Orlani)

Ava Grace Marie (Damon)

Avery Ru

Blair Izabella (Shayne, Jayme)

Bridget Kathleen

Ebony Scarlet (Chelsea)

Emerald Margaret Lesley

Florence Elizabeth

Isla Skye Louise

Jamieson Natalie (Tyren)

Jasmin Astrid Lynette (Tomas, Devan)

Keira Rose Panita (Emily, Lukas, Ryan)

Kyiah Hope (Tylar)

Lacey Rose (Cooper)

Lillian Constance

Macaitie Rose

Ocea Grace (Imogen, Zoe)

Olivia Helen Amanda

Quinn Harper

Reagan Belle (Murron, Xander)

Rebecca Lace (Jacqueline)

Ruby Geraldine (Matilda)

Savannah Serene (Francis, Arrow)

Sienna Ella Rose

Tenley Emerson

Zyla Brooklyn

 

Boys

Alexander Johanes William

Archer Garnet

Axle Paul (Syvannah)

Ben Daniel Thomas

Callum Kenneth David

Charlie Malcolm Thomas

Douglas Kevin John (Jackson, Thomas, Harrison, Robert)

Ethan Timothy Scott

Gabriel Cochise

Henry Charles Nelson (Maddison, Tyson, Blake, Abbi-Lee)

Jaggar John Adam

Jaspar Edmund James (Juliah, Leah, Xavier)

Kiah Howard (Kody, Kane)

Leo Adam Patrick

Lincoln Viet (Hannah)

Lorenzo Richard

Lyric Warren Thomas (Jazzy)

Mac Bruce Eric Lyle

Maddox Taj James (Cooper, Jett)

Quinn Howie

Sebastian Tee Jay (Gerhitt, Kohan)

Tate Allan Joseph (Mia, Jed)

Tyson Stanley Robert

William Robert Laurence (Matilda)

Xavian Ryu (Isabeau)

Zainan Paul (Braiton)

(Photo shows the entrance to Naracoorte Caves, South Australia’s only World Heritage listed site, and the biggest attraction for the town of Naracoorte on the Limestone Coast)

Gypsy Mabel: Birth Announcements from Hobart (August)

21 Friday Sep 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

Girls

Addison Daisy

Amaya Grace

Ebony Rose (Jake, Samantha, Luke)

Ellianna Ruby

Eva Siane

Gypsy Mabel (Jak, Asta)

Ivy Wendy

Katie Arabella (Elizabeth)

Maggie Maree

Mila Evelyn

Stella Roma Elizabeth (Tom, Georgia, Oscar)

Victoria Lynn

 

Boys

Fletcher Damian James

Harlyn Chayse Robert (Mason)

Henry Anthony Paul

Jonah Peter William

Lachlan James Brendan

Mackenzie James

Oliver Lyall (Thomas, Harrison)

Oscar Henry Andrew (George)

Ryan Eric August (Max, Ella)

Seamus Jordan

Shelden Lewis

Thomas Ryan Alan

(Picture shows a table decoration of vegetables and flowers at a quiz night dinner organised by the Slow Food Movement of Hobart during August; photo from Slow Food blog)

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