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Tag Archives: name popularity

Famous Name: Kylie

07 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

Australian Aboriginal names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, Irish names, name history, name meaning, name popularity, name trends

Last weekend was the annual Sydney Mardi Gras Gay and Lesbian Street Parade, which for several years now has been held on the first Saturday in March. The parade is the culmination of a gay and lesbian festival, and combines political protest with a celebration of gay cultures and lifestyles, then ends with one enormous shindig that proves nobody can party like Sydney.

Recently-out Magda Szubanski was in attendance, looking pleased and slightly nervous, and the guest of honour at the post-parade Mardi Gras Party was pop diva Kylie Minogue, who last appeared at Mardi Gras fourteen years ago. Kylie waived her $16 000 appearance fee and performed for free.

Kylie began her career as a child actor, failed to join the Young Talent Time cast, as her sister Dannii did, then shot to fame playing teenage mechanic Charlene Edna Mitchell on soap opera Neighbours. Her wedding to Scott Robinson, played by Jason Donovan, attracted 20 million viewers in the UK. This was enough to take her to Britain to begin her career as a pop singer.

At first she was treated scornfully by the critics, and disdainfully labelled “the singing budgie” for being small and chirpy. However, she has become one of the British pop industry’s great survivors – constantly re-inventing her image to become a sex symbol, and from early on appreciatively embraced by the gay community as one of their icons.

She has overcome breast cancer, and at the age of 43, is regarded as Britain’s most powerful celebrity, and been named one of the 100 Hottest Women of All Time. She currently lives in London’s once fashionable Chelsea.

According to baby name books, the name Kylie means “boomerang” in an Aboriginal language, and if you are prepared to dig a little deeper, we are told that the word kylie comes from the Nyungar language from south-west Western Australia, and there are place names ending with -kylee to indicate that (for example, that a river is shaped like a boomerang).

However, a rival theory is that kylie refers not to a boomerang, but to the hunting stick, which isn’t curved and doesn’t come back, being used to bring down prey. I have certainly seen these hunting sticks being identified as kylies in texts over a century old, so this idea is hardly a new one.

Unfortunately for both these theories, when I consulted a Nyungar dictionary, the word kylie isn’t in it. A boomerang is called a kirli (KEER-lee), and a throwing stick is called a dowak. It would seem that kylie was a non-Indigenous slight corruption of the word kirli, which is very similar to the word for boomerang in the Walpiri language of Central Australia – karli.

I’m not sure how settlers confused dowak for kylie though; perhaps they misunderstood what the Aborigines were telling them, or lacked the cultural context to see that a boomerang and a throwing stick were two different tools.

It’s easier to understand why Australians of British descent latched onto it as a personal name in the 1950s and ’60s. It fit in so well with the trend for similar-sounding names of Irish origin, such as Kerry and Kelly that were also growing in popularity – a trend that is still going strong, as names such as Keeley, Keira, Kirra and Kirrily attest. Kylie just had that familiar “Australian sound”. It also seems to have increased the popularity of the male name Kyle.

The name Kylie first hit the charts in the 1950s, was Top 100 by the 1960s when Kylie Minogue was born, and peaked in the 1970s as the #2 name of that decade. By the 1990s it had left the Top 100, and in the last year or two has left the charts altogether.

The plummeting popularity of the name Kylie in the 1990s must surely owe something to comedienne Mary-Anne Fahey’s iconic character Kylie Mole from The Comedy Company sketch show. This befreckled, hoydenish schoolgirl, stuck in the permanent bad mood of adolescence, not only popularised the word bogan, but her second-best friend Rebecca appeared with her on the show, played by Kylie Minogue. Although she struck a chord with us youngsters, she gave the name Kylie a certain image that parents probably didn’t wish to bestow upon their daughters.

Top Baby Names from Regional New South Wales for 2011

06 Tuesday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name popularity, popular names

This follows on from Top Baby Names from Regional Victoria for 2011 – read that and you’ll understand how this one works.

The Hunter Valley

In the Hunter Valley around the city of Newcastle, the #1 name in the state, William, does not make the Top 4, being used less often than Hamish and Lincoln, who aren’t even Top 50 in the state. In the Hunter, William is actually quite a rare name, being used only a few times per year. On the girls’ list, #6 Charlotte doesn’t get a look in either.

Girls

  1. Mia (5), Olivia (3)
  2. Chloe (1)
  3. Ava (9), Ruby (2)
  4. Sophie (7)
  5. Amelia (10), Emily (12), Isabella (4), Ivy (33), Matilda (18)
  6. Evie (28), Zoe (16), Sienna (8)

Boys

  1. Lucas (2)
  2. Samuel (14), Lachlan (3)
  3. Jack (6), Liam (15), Oliver (5), Thomas (8)
  4. Eli (45), Ethan (4), Flynn (51), Hamish (67), Harrison (26), Noah (7), Riley (20), Xavier (22), Lincoln (82)

Albury-Wondonga

Albury and Wodonga are on the New South Wales-Victoria border, with a foot in either camp. For convenience, I have placed them under New South Wales. The Border Mail recorded birth notices for 321 boys and 340 girls; there were 15 sets of twins.

Girls

  1. Grace (13)
  2. Amelia (1), Charlotte (6), Chloe (2)
  3. Lily (14), Ruby (2)
  4. Ella (11), Georgia (23), Lucy (25), Millie (-), Olivia (3)
  5. Charli (87), Isla (22), Sophie (7)
  6. Addison (51), Ava (9), Hannah (19), Isabel (100), Mia (5), Molly (53), Scarlett (24), Zara (26)

Boys

  1. Charlie (18)
  2. Jack (6)
  3. Benjamin (11)
  4. Jake (28), Lachlan (3), Noah (7)
  5. Jacob (13), Thomas (8), William (1)
  6. Hunter (48), Jackson (40), Joshua (9), Liam (15), Max (17), Patrick (54), Xavier (22)
  7. Campbell (-), Cooper (10), Darcy (-), James (12), Levi (29), Logan (34), Oliver (5), Riley (20)

Cessnock

In the city of Cessnock, within the Hunter Valley, the most popular name for boys is Koby (96), and its variant spellings. Ashton (55) and Noah (7) tied for second place. The most popular girl’s name was Evie (28), and Hannah (19) was the runner-up. The Advertiser recorded 70 birth notices, 35 from each gender.

Wagga Wagga (pictured)

In the city of Wagga Wagga, the state’s central west, Oliver (5) is the most popular boy’s name, and for girls it is Ruby (2).

Popular names for girls include Charlotte (6), Sophie (7) and Zoe (16), and for boys it is Toby (62), Max (17) and Judd (-).

Chloe and William – #1 in New South Wales

03 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on Chloe and William – #1 in New South Wales

Tags

name popularity, name trends, popular names

Looking at the girls’ Top 20, Chloe rose two places to take the #1 position, which she last held in 2006. Meanwhile, Isabella slipped from first place to #4.

The biggest gainer was Ava, who went up five places from #14 to #9; Sophie wasn’t far behind, upping herself four places from #11 to #7.

The biggest loser was Lily, who slid seven places down to #14. It seems that across the states, the name Lily is falling in popularity without ever reaching the top spot. Similar-sounding Emily went down four places, from #8 to #12.

Other than that, the list is about as lively as molasses, with Olivia, Mia, Charlotte, Sienna, Amelia, Ella, Sophia, Zoe and Emma stable, and Ruby, Grace, Matilda, Hannah and Jessica not changing position at all.

All the girls’ lists have been extremely conservative, and New South Wales seems the most conservative of all, with no new names in the Top 20 and the #1 name a retread. It does feel as if everyone has decided what their favourite girls’ names are, and they’re sticking with them.

On the boys’ Top 20, royal William maintains the #1 position which he has held since 2009.

The big mover and shaker was Lucas, who ascended eight places from #10 to reach the #2 spot. Maybe Lucas is gunning for first position. Other names which grew in popularity were Ethan, Benjamin and Lachlan. Yep Lachlan – still going strong.

Joshua fell the most, five places from #4 down to #9. While Jack was #1 in Victoria, in New South Wales it dropped four places, from #2 to #6. It seems that Jack the Lad is beginning to lose ground. Thomas and Cooper also decreased in popularity – names which were #1 in the ACT and Queensland.

Oliver, Noah, James, Samuel, Liam, Alexander and Isaac remained stable, and Jacob, Max and Riley didn’t move a muscle. I think New South Wales is the only state where Riley didn’t suffer a loss.

Charlie is new to the Top 20 at #18, while Daniel left the list.

Slightly more movement than the girls’ Top 20, but overall New South Wales didn’t change too much when it came to names at the top.

Further down the list, there have been some new developments though. Celebrity baby name Harper made her way onto the Top 100 at #57, indicating a very rapid rise.

Mila and Milla are both new on the list at #72 and #84. I was a little surprised to see that Mila is higher than Milla, but both these names have been fashionable for a while now.

Aaliyah is new on the list at #77. I predicted we’d see a greater proliferation in spellings of this name, but the original spelling is popular enough to make it to the Top 100. If spellings were combined, this name would be much, much higher.

As in Victoria and the ACT, Charlie is now Top 100 for girls as well as boys, since she joined the list at #93.

In other news, Taylor has gone from the Top 100, Ashley is still hanging on, and Tahlia has had a big slide from #47 to #81.

Over on the boy’s list, another celebrity baby name, Flynn, has made his mark, joining the Top 100 at #51. It’s an impressive start, and Flynn will probably be Top 50 in 2012.

Darcy has left the Top 100. Although it fell everywhere, I think New South Wales is the first state to abandon Darcy, and the reason is probably that it is starting to seem too feminine in usage.

Phoenix has gone from the Top 100 after just one year – was it a flash in the pan, or is it still gathering momentum? Felix is new to the list, and seems like the perfect replacement. Braxton is another new-name-with-an-X for boys.

Ali has done well, climbing from #93 to #71. It’s a sign of Arabic names doing well in general, and it’s also a good cultural cross-over name.

A surprise success is John, who has risen from barely-there #99 to #77 – quite a jump up for a name that many pegged as being in decline.

 

Top 100 Baby Girl Names in New South Wales for 2011

03 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on Top 100 Baby Girl Names in New South Wales for 2011

Tags

name data, name popularity, popular names

  1. Chloe
  2. Ruby
  3. Olivia
  4. Isabella
  5. Mia
  6. Charlotte
  7. Sophie
  8. Sienna
  9. Ava
  10. Amelia
  11. Ella
  12. Emily
  13. Grace
  14. Lily
  15. Sophia
  16. Zoe
  17. Emma
  18. Matilda
  19. Hannah
  20. Jessica
  21. Eva
  22. Isla
  23. Georgia
  24. Scarlett
  25. Lucy
  26. Zara
  27. Abigail
  28. Evie
  29. Jasmine
  30. Isabelle
  31. Sarah
  32. Sofia
  33. Ivy
  34. Lilly
  35. Maddison
  36. Layla
  37. Chelsea
  38. Maya
  39. Madison
  40. Summer
  41. Alexis
  42. Holly
  43. Savannah
  44. Elizabeth
  45. Imogen
  46. Annabelle
  47. Lara
  48. Alice
  49. Hayley
  50. Bella
  51. Addison
  52. Audrey
  53. Molly
  54. Stella
  55. Alyssa
  56. Willow
  57. Harper
  58. Ellie
  59. Anna
  60. Natalie
  61. Phoebe
  62. Lillian
  63. Claire
  64. Gabriella
  65. Rose
  66. Mikayla
  67. Paige
  68. Piper
  69. Evelyn
  70. Madeline
  71. Jade
  72. Mila
  73. Violet
  74. Samantha
  75. Victoria
  76. Eliza
  77. Aaliyah
  78. Poppy
  79. Indiana
  80. Leah
  81. Tahlia
  82. Mackenzie
  83. Erin
  84. Milla
  85. Caitlin
  86. Amelie
  87. Charli
  88. Alana
  89. Lola
  90. Ashley
  91. Kayla
  92. Angelina
  93. Charlie
  94. Madeleine
  95. Eden
  96. Eloise
  97. Alexandra
  98. Amber
  99. Eve
  100. Isabel

Top 100 Baby Boy Names in New South Wales for 2011

03 Saturday Mar 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on Top 100 Baby Boy Names in New South Wales for 2011

Tags

name data, name popularity, popular names

  1. William
  2. Lucas
  3. Lachlan
  4. Ethan
  5. Oliver
  6. Jack
  7. Noah
  8. Thomas
  9. Joshua
  10. Cooper
  11. Benjamin
  12. James
  13. Jacob
  14. Samuel
  15. Liam
  16. Alexander
  17. Max
  18. Charlie
  19. Isaac
  20. Riley
  21. Jayden
  22. Xavier
  23. Ryan
  24. Daniel
  25. Tyler
  26. Harrison
  27. Mason
  28. Jake
  29. Levi
  30. Harry
  31. Oscar
  32. Matthew
  33. Luke
  34. Logan
  35. Michael
  36. Nicholas
  37. Aiden
  38. Sebastian
  39. Henry
  40. Jackson
  41. Dylan
  42. Hayden
  43. Joseph
  44. Elijah
  45. Eli
  46. Blake
  47. Archie
  48. Hunter
  49. Adam
  50. Beau
  51. Flynn
  52. Connor
  53. Zachary
  54. Patrick
  55. Ashton
  56. Christian
  57. George
  58. Finn
  59. Nathan
  60. Nate
  61. Angus
  62. Toby
  63. Jordan
  64. Bailey
  65. Leo
  66. Anthony
  67. Hamish
  68. Edward
  69. Caleb
  70. Andrew
  71. Ali
  72. Marcus
  73. Charles
  74. Cameron
  75. Callum
  76. Zac
  77. John
  78. David
  79. Luca
  80. Mitchell
  81. Kai
  82. Lincoln
  83. Aidan
  84. Christopher
  85. Chase
  86. Dominic
  87. Austin
  88. Jonathan
  89. Owen
  90. Hugo
  91. Aaron
  92. Alex
  93. Ryder
  94. Jett
  95. Felix
  96. Koby
  97. Jaxon
  98. Gabriel
  99. Jasper
  100. Braxton

Famous Name: Kevin

29 Wednesday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 21 Comments

Tags

classic names, famous namesakes, international naming laws, Irish names, Mer de Noms, name history, name meaning, name perceptions, name popularity, name studies, saints names, The Name Station

Over at The Name Station, there is an article quoting two studies which demonstrate that Kevin is the worst possible name to have in Germany. For some reason, this name really gets up the noses of Central European schoolteachers and cyber-daters.

As it turns out, the Germans aren’t exactly Robinson Crusoe in this regard. According to Lou at Mer de Noms (niece of a Kevin), the French also look down their noses at the name Kevin, and say, Non, non, non! Across the Channel, Kevin is considered a chavvy (bogan) name, to the point where kev is a synonym of chav, innit?

And if we hop over the Pond, American TV shows such as Daria and South Park depict Kevins as either dumb jocks or disposable meaningless characters. Oddly enough, in the United States Kevin is disliked for the exact opposite reason as in Europe – far from being too lower-class and urban, Kevin is seen as too middle-class and suburban.

A persistent Internet rumour is that the name Kevin is banned in Mexico because it will lead to “teasing and ridicule”. Actually the Chihuahua state government forbids parents from using any non-Spanish name without a Spanish middle name, and for some reason, reporters always seem to use Kevin as an example, hence the confusion. That may say more about how the name Kevin is viewed by the reporters than how it is in Mexico.

Apparently vast tracts of the Northern Hemisphere are infected by an intense loathing of people named Kevin. Here, another group who has joined the We Hate Kevin Club is the Australian Labor Party Caucus, who on Monday morning voted against Kevin Rudd’s bid for the leadership, two votes to one. So much do they detest Kevin Rudd that they profess a preference to losing an election without Rudd than winning one with him.

Their vote in support of Julia Gillard is not so much a ringing endorsement of her leadership as it is a sign of their determination to vote for ABK – Anyone But Kevin.

Kevin Rudd was elected Prime Minister of Australia in a landslide victory in 2007, his supporters running with the slogan Kevin ’07. Soon his non-stop work ethic led to him being labelled Kevin 24/7, and his frequent diplomatic trips around the world Kevin 747. Some papers sneeringly called him Kevin 7-11 for catering to the public a little too readily, like a convenient corner shop, and rumour had it he was Kevin 007 – a double-agent leaking information that could damage his enemies.

However, his authoritarian work style and biting insults made him anything but loved by his Labor colleagues, who ousted him the minute his popularity slipped in the polls and replaced him with his Deputy, Julia Gillard. This was all done so quickly that Rudd supporters have some basis for seeing him as stabbed in the back, as happens so often in the workplace.

Since his dumping, there has remained the vague threat (or hope) that he would one day rise up and take back his power. When Julia Gillard’s own popularity plummeted to record lows, he suggested he might run for party leader (and thus Prime Minister).

Polls done in the lead-up to Monday morning’s ballot showed great public support for Kevin Rudd, with the majority of people preferring him to either Julia Gillard or Tony Abbot, the Opposition Leader. The Pro-Kevin lobby reached fever-pitch. He was treated like a rock star wherever he went, received messages from people all over the country in his support, and was proclaimed the People’s Prime Minister. However, the people’s support is useless without the support of your party. That’s politics.

Maybe the Germans, the French, the British, the North Americans, and possibly the Mexicans can’t stand Kevin, but it seems Australians are pretty okay with it. We elected a Kevin Prime Minister, even though Dame Edna Everage expressed some doubts about the idea (she was probably catering to the anti-Kevin prejudices of her chiefly British audience). And even though he’s gone, he was never voted out, and clearly a sizeable chunk of the population would like him back.

The media love the name Kevin as well – it’s so useful for catchphrases and headlines. Not only Kevin ’07, Kevin 24/7, Kevin 747, Kevin 7-11 and Kevin 007, but also in the headlines were Kevingate, The Kevinator, Good Heaven’s It’s Kevin, Kevin Heaven, Kevin in Heaven, A Kevinly Sign from Above, Knocking on Kevin’s Door, and Kevenge (an act of revenge committed by someone named Kevin).

Australians have never had problems with names of Irish origin (as the list of Famous Names is starting to make pretty obvious). Kevin is the Anglicised form of the Irish name Caoimhin, a form of the older Cóemgein, which can be translated as “gentle” or “handsome”. Saint Kevin is the patron saint of Dublin, and is sometimes called the Irish St Francis of Assisi for his love of animals and nature. According to legend, an angel turned up at his baptism and instructed that he should be called Kevin, which the bishop naturally felt obliged to go along with. Maybe Kevin truly is a name from heaven? (A more plausible tale is that his name was bestowed upon him by fellow monks in tribute to his sweet nature).

In Australia, Kevin is a classic name which has never left the charts since record-keeping began in 1900. It first joined the Top 100 in the 1910s, and peaked in the 1930s at #6. It remained a Top 100 name for nine decades until the early 2000s, when it just dipped out at #101. Currently it’s #154.

In Queensland, which is Mr Rudd’s home state, there were twice as many babies named Kevin last year than babies named Julia, his deposer. And I have noticed in the birth announcements how common Kevin is as a middle name for boys.

Are they being named after a father, an uncle, a grandfather … or a lost Prime Minister who may still return, like the once and future king? Rudd Redux?

NOTE: Kevin is a Top 100 name in at least nine different countries, two of which, France and the United States, supposedly despise it. Go figure. Maybe this whole anti-Kevin thing is a beat-up.

MYTH: Certain Baby Names Must Be Avoided Because They Are “Dog Names”

12 Sunday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Baby Name Mythbusters

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

dog names, name forums, name perceptions, name popularity

toddler__dogBaby Name Mythbusters is a new Category I dreamed up to replace Celebrity Baby Names, which seems redundant now that we have Celebrity Baby News. I thought it would be a fun way to examine some of the myths prevalent amongst the baby naming community, and see whether they stack up.

I was in an Australian parenting forum where someone was looking for opinions on a baby name they were considering – Sailor, for a girl. One of the responses was ewww not sailor i had a dog called that. This struck me as one of the least useful or helpful things you could say in this situation – I mean I had a horse named Caroline; I don’t expect that name to be forever off limits for babies because I claimed it as a “horse name”. (I also had a dog named Judith, same deal).

It got me thinking about how often “That’s a dog’s name” comes up in discussions on baby names, and how it is designed to end all debate. That’s a dog’s name: a good parent would never give their baby a name suitable for a dog : discussion over, seems to be pretty much how it is supposed to work.

I decided to search through baby name forums to see what names were perceived as “dog names”, and then see how popular they really were for dogs, based on the popularity charts put out by a major dog tag corporation, which is the only national database for pet names that I know. Then I could compare them to the latest available data for baby name popularity.

I hit upon this method because it’s common for people to use popularity charts to decide how a name’s popularity reflects its usage for each gender. So if Matthew has continually charted for males, and never for females, it’s usually decided that makes it a “boy name”, and if there are more girl babies named Harper than boy babies, some would argue that Harper is more of a female name than a male one.

I didn’t see any reason why that method couldn’t be applied to see whether a name was more dog than human. Here is what I discovered:

NAMES THAT PEOPLE THINK ARE DOG NAMES THAT ARE MORE POPULAR FOR DOGS THAN HUMANS

  • Bailey (#36 dog, #47 human)
  • Barney (#28 dog, unranked human)
  • Bear (#21 dog, unranked human)
  • Beau (#17 dog, #71 human)
  • Billy (#30 dog, #112 human)
  • Buddy (#12 dog, unranked human)
  • Buster (#14 dog, unranked human)
  • Charlie (#7 dog name, #22 human)
  • Duke (#48 dog, unranked human)
  • Harley (#25 dog, #126 human)
  • Harry (#15 dog, #27 human)
  • Jake (#4 dog, #25 human)
  • Lucky (#23 dog, unranked human)
  • Max (#1 dog, #17 human)
  • Milo (#22 dog, unranked human)
  • Monty (#10 dog, unranked human)
  • Rex (#24 dog, #472 human)
  • Rusty (#18 dog, unranked human)
  • Sam (#2 dog, #97 human)
  • Shadow (#19 dog, unranked human)
  • Toby (#5 dog, #56 human)
  • Zeus (#50 dog, unranked human)
  • Bella (#15 dog, #41 human)
  • Belle (#41 dog, unranked human)
  • Buffy (#47 dog, unranked human)
  • Cassie (#23 dog, unranked human)
  • Cleo (#55 dog, unranked human)
  • Coco (#11, unranked human)
  • Daisy (#9 dog, #149 human)
  • Gypsy (#42 dog, unranked human)
  • Holly (#13 dog, #42 human)
  • Honey (#25 dog, unranked human)
  • Lucy (#5 dog, #21 human)
  • Maggie (#18 dog, #204 human)
  • Millie (#34 dog, #202 human)
  • Misty (#27 dog, unranked human)
  • Molly (#2 dog, #55 human)
  • Poppy (#57 dog, #68 human)
  • Sally (#7 dog, #306 human)
  • Sasha (# 6 dog, #167 human)
  • Sheba (#32, unranked human)
  • Tara (#31 dog, #153 human)
  • Tess (#8 dog, #260 human)
  • Zoe (#10 dog, #15 human)

NAMES THAT PEOPLE THINK ARE DOG NAMES THAT ARE MORE POPULAR FOR HUMANS THAN DOGS

  • Cooper (unranked dog, #7 human)
  • Jack (#3 dog, #2 human)
  • Riley (unranked dog, #20 human)
  • Annabelle (unranked dog, #38)
  • Emily (unranked dog, #8 human)
  • Maya (unranked dog, #46 human)
  • Sophie (#16 dog, #11 human)

A NAME THAT PEOPLE THINK IS A DOG NAME THAT’S EQUALLY POPULAR FOR DOGS AND HUMANS

  • Chloe (#3 dog, #3 human)

NAMES THAT PEOPLE THINK ARE DOG NAMES, BUT ARE NOT ACTUALLY COMMONLY GIVEN TO DOGS

  • Alfie
  • Andy
  • Akira
  • Bandit
  • Barclay
  • Baxter
  • Bernie
  • Bran
  • Brindley
  • Brock
  • Brody
  • Bruno
  • Buck
  • Champ
  • Chance
  • Colby
  • Cosmo
  • Dash
  • Dexter
  • Digby
  • Earl
  • Eddie
  • Elliot
  • Elvis
  • Gage
  • Gunner
  • Hunter
  • Nico
  • Otis
  • Pete
  • Prince
  • Remy
  • Rocco
  • Roscoe
  • Rufus
  • Samson
  • Shiloh
  • Sonny
  • Spike
  • Winston
  • Wyatt
  • Zane
  • Zeke
  • Ziggy
  • Abby
  • Apple
  • Bess
  • Betsy
  • Bindi
  • Bluebell
  • Dakota
  • Dixie
  • Fifi
  • Fran
  • Gigi
  • Ginger
  • Jenna
  • Josie
  • Kiki
  • Libby
  • Lola
  • Lulu
  • Luna
  • Macy
  • Maddie
  • Madison
  • Madeline
  • Maisie
  • Mia
  • Olga
  • Piper
  • Raven
  • Reba
  • Sadie
  • Sailor
  • Skipper
  • Sophia
  • Star
  • Zuzu

NAMES THAT ARE POPULAR FOR DOGS, BUT PEOPLE DON’T SEEM TO THINK OF THEM AS DOG NAMES

  • Oscar #6
  • Zac #9
  • Tyson #11
  • Ben #13
  • Jasper #26
  • Jackson #29
  • George #34
  • Casper #38
  • Angus #39
  • Jesse #40
  • Cody #42
  • Basil #45
  • Gus #47
  • Jock #49
  • Bronson #51
  • Henry #53
  • Casey #54
  • Clyde #60
  • Ralph #58
  • Bonnie #4
  • Rosie #14
  • Ruby #17
  • Penny #24
  • Gemma #28
  • Jasmine #32
  • Roxy #33
  • Kelly #38
  • Tessa #35
  • Emma #48
  • Chelsea #51
  • Ellie #52
  • Amber #53
  • Jedda #58
  • Heidi #60

From this we can see that although people were able to correctly identify some names as “dog names” that had greater popularity for dogs than humans, there were many more names that they were wrong about. Much as people might imagine that dog owners call their pets Spike and Fifi, these names did not even make the Top 60.

Even more revealingly, there were a number of names that were very popular for dogs that didn’t seem to earn them the title of “dog name”. Henry and Emma are both names commonly given to dogs, and yet I couldn’t find any examples of parents being warned off these names as “too doggy”.

You might argue that’s because these names are so popular for humans, and yet you can see from the first list that very popular baby names like Charlie and Zoe were correctly identified as names commonly given to dogs. You can also see from the second list that popular baby names like Cooper and Emily were incorrectly identified as “dog names”. Moreover, names such as Bonnie and Basil are many times more often given to dogs than humans, yet they were not perceived as dog names.

Because people seemed to do so poorly at correlating baby names perceived as “dog names” with names that were actually given to dogs, I am calling this

MYTH BUSTED

Disclaimer: Information for entertainment purposes only; results may not be scientifically accurate and further studies need to be done with better data. There is no connection between Baby Name Mythbusters and the television show “Mythbusters”, so nobody needs to sue me or anything.

Top Baby Names from Regional Victoria for 2011

09 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name popularity, name trends, popular names

Have you ever noticed that the official name data for your state or territory doesn’t always tally with your own experiences? Perhaps overall there were more baby girls named Mia in your state than anything else, and yet in your own town, every second person seems to be calling their new baby Ava, or Scarlett. You might even pick a name much further down the rankings, such as Jett, but when you rock up to the first day of kindy, there’s four other boys named Jett in your son’s class (plus two named Jhett).

If you’re interested in name popularity, it helps to keep a weather eye on the local conditions. The easiest way to do this is to read the birth announcements in your local paper, which is where the information on these towns and regional centres came from.

GEELONG

Boys

1. Oliver (#3)

2. William (#2)

3. Charlie (#18)

4. Harry (#19)

5. Archie (#37)

6. Xavier (#13)

7. Jack (#1)

8. Noah (#5)

9. James (#7)

10. Cooper (#11) and Oscar (#20)

Girls

1. Amelia (#8)

2. Olivia (#3)

3. Mia (#1)

4. Sophie (#11)

5. Chloe (#4)

6. Ruby (#2)

7. Matilda (#16)

8. Sienna (#7)

9. Willow (#39

10. Ella (#9), Emily (#12), Evie (#24), Milla (#35) and Zoe (#15)

BALLARAT [pictured]

A lady named Ruth Matthews has been collating name data from birth notices in “The Courier” since 1964, after the birth of her first child. Trends she has noticed include a wider pool of names (107 names for boys in 1965, compared to 235 in 2011), variant spellings of popular names, and unisex names. Mrs Matthews counts similar names as one.

Boys

1. Cooper (#11)

2. Harry (#19) or Harrison (#29)

3. Jack (#1) or Jackson (#30)

4. Oliver (#3), Will (-) or William (#2)

5. Thomas (#6) or Tom (-)

6. James (#7)

7. Max (#14) or Maxwell (-), Xavier (#13)

8. Lachlan (#10)

Girls

1. Ruby (#2)

2. Charlotte (#5), Lily (#10)

3. Mia (#1)

4. Grace (#14) or Gracie (-), Lucy (#17), Maddison (#43)

5. Isabella (#6), Olivia (#3)

6. Olive (#82), Chloe (#4), Evie (#24), Matilda (#16), Sophie (#11)

7. Addison (#54), Annabelle (#50), Chelsea (#38), Ella (#9), Emily (#12), Sienna (#7)

THE SOUTH-WEST REGION

They collated their names even more vaguely, counting Ava and Eva as the same name, as well as Pippa and Piper.

Boys

1. Harry (#19)
2. Charlie (#18), Oliver (#3), Thomas/Tom/Tommy/Tommie (#6)
3. Archie (#37)
4. Cooper (#11), Harrison (#29), Lewis/Louis (#96), William/Will/Wil (#2)
5. Harvey (#66), Lachlan (#10)

Girls

1. Isabelle/Isabel/Isobel/Isabella/Bella (#26/46/-/6/88)
2. Ava/Eva (#12/27), Grace (#14)
3. Emily (#12), Madison/Maddison (#30/43), Mia (#1), Zoe (#15)
4. Amelia/Amellia/Amalia (#8), Charlotte (#5), Pippa/Piper (-/#75), Sophie (#11)

Another way to keep track of local baby names is to contact the local hospital in your area, to see if someone makes a public record of the most popular baby names.

At Bacchus Marsh and Melton Regional Hospital, just outside Melbourne, the most popular name for girls was Ruby, and the most popular name for boys was either Lachlan or Ryan. Other popular girls names were Isabelle, Lilly, Olivia, Sienna, Zoe, Amelia, Ava, Ellie, Hayley and Matilda, and for the boys, it was Cooper, Jack, Thomas and Tyler. In Bacchus Marsh, Xavier, Jaxon and Ryder are considered unusual names.

Ruby and Oliver – #1 in South Australia

07 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name popularity, name trends, popular names

On the girls’ chart, Ruby went up two places to make #1, while Ella, #1 for 2010, sunk ten places.

The biggest riser was Sophie, going up six places, and Scarlett also rose up the ranks. Chloe and Lily both dropped three places, so it seemed as if S names became more popular, while names with a strong L, ending with an -ee sound were failing.

Remaining stable (not changing more than two places) were Mia, Emily, Isabella, Olivia, Ava, Grace and Hannah. Charlotte, Sienna, Amelia and Zoe didn’t budge at all.

Jessica, Lucy and Lilly dropped out of the Top 20; in the case of the last two, it does seem that the L-sound names have had their day.

Replacing them were three names returning to the Top 20 – Matilda and Emma, last seen in 2009; and Madison, last seen in 2008. In fact, there was a real feeling of “more of the same please” from the girls Top 20.

On the boys’ Top 20, there was a bit more colour and movement. Oliver went up four places to reach #1, while Jack was nudged down from the top spot to #2.

Tyler was the big success story, shooting up eleven places, and Ethan, Noah, Liam and Jacob also made significant gains.

Joshua dropped a massive fourteen places, and Riley, Lachlan, James and Samuel also fell down the charts. I do think that Riley is gradually being replaced by other surname-y boys’ names.

William, Lucas, Max, Thomas, Charlie, Cooper and Alexander remained steady, with little change.

There was only one new name on the boys’ chart, but unlike the girls’, this one was genuinely new to the Top 20 – Blake. As in other states, Harry dropped out of the Top 20; this does seem to be one name which we will be seeing less often.

As in other states, Flynn did well, joining the Top 100 for the first time. However, while Charlie was Top 100 for both boys and girls in Victoria and the ACT, in South Australia Charlie remains a boys’ name, with Charli still the preferred spelling on the girls’ chart.

As in other states, there was a noticeable trend for girls’ names to remain relatively stable, while boys’ names were more likely to experience changes in popularity. This goes against conventional wisdom that parents tend to be conservative with naming boys, sticking to the same old names year after year, while girls’ names are prone to fickle fashion. Maybe it’s about time some of the other conventional wisdoms about gender in names gets a rethink?

 

Top 100 Baby Boy Names in South Australia for 2011

07 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on Top 100 Baby Boy Names in South Australia for 2011

Tags

name data, name popularity, popular names

  1. Oliver
  2. Jack
  3. Ethan
  4. William
  5. Lucas
  6. Noah
  7. Tyler
  8. Liam
  9. Jacob
  10. Lachlan
  11. Riley
  12. Max
  13. James
  14. Thomas
  15. Charlie
  16. Cooper
  17. Joshua
  18. Samuel
  19. Blake
  20. Alexander
  21. Oscar
  22. Mason
  23. Jayden
  24. Jackson
  25. Henry
  26. Harrison
  27. Benjamin
  28. Levi
  29. Logan
  30. Isaac
  31. Harry
  32. Xavier
  33. Jordan
  34. Daniel
  35. Connor
  36. Sebastian
  37. Hunter
  38. Jake
  39. Brodie
  40. Aiden
  41. Caleb
  42. Dylan
  43. Luke
  44. Eli
  45. Owen
  46. Hayden
  47. Ashton
  48. Angus
  49. Mitchell
  50. Hudson
  51. Callum
  52. Zachary
  53. Elijah
  54. Archie
  55. Seth
  56. Ryder
  57. Ryan
  58. Nate
  59. Jaxon
  60. Hamish
  61. Austin
  62. Cody
  63. Tyson
  64. Matthew
  65. Bailey
  66. Patrick
  67. Archer
  68. Nicholas
  69. Nathan
  70. Finn
  71. Chase
  72. Alex
  73. Leo
  74. Joel
  75. Declan
  76. Joseph
  77. Flynn
  78. Edward
  79. Darcy
  80. Michael
  81. Lincoln
  82. Brock
  83. Jett
  84. Kai
  85. Anthony
  86. Adam
  87. Toby
  88. Luca
  89. Charles
  90. Jesse
  91. Jasper
  92. Harvey
  93. George
  94. Sam
  95. Evan
  96. Cameron
  97. Louis
  98. Kade
  99. Christian
  100. David
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