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Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Tag Archives: name trends

What I Know About Australian Names

09 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by A.O. in Naming Issues

≈ 13 Comments

Tags

Appellation Mountain, Arabic names, Australian Aboriginal names, birth notices, blogging, middle names, name trends, popular names, royal baby names, unisex names, vintage names, Waltzing More Than Matilda

1000posts

This will be my 1000th blog post since I started blogging nearly three years ago in 2011 – something which fills me with a certain amount of awe, coupled with a strong feeling I may have posted too often!

When Abby from Appellation Mountain reached her 1000th blog post in 2010, she decided to share a few of the things she had learned about names as a blogger. I thought about doing that, then realised how embarrassing it would be to admit how little I knew to begin with. And I’ve learned so many things that I’d need another blog with 1000 blog posts to explain all that I’ve learned writing this blog.

So instead I will share a few things I have learned about Australian names.

1. Australia, like other countries, has its own unique name trends

Matilda, Lachlan and Banjo mean more to us than in other countries. Darcy is a boy’s name here, Asher is unisex, and Avery is only for girls. We have a special connection with Talia, but prefer to spell it Tahlia.

Adrian was popular here for much longer than in other countries; Mitchell and Chelsea are still popular here while they have disappeared from the Top 100s of other places; Mervyn and Dulcie were only ever popular in Australia, while Derek and Gillian never became popular here.

Because of our relatively small population size, name trends often show up earlier in Australia than elsewhere, so that names such as Isabella and Jayden were Top 100 here long before anywhere else. Does that mean that current Australian favourites like Amity and Braxton will become popular elsewhere? Only time will tell!

Although Australia’s name trends are heavily influenced by both the UK and US, and sometimes by Europe, only one country can claim to be our baby name twin, and that is New Zealand. It’s seldom acknowledged, but we share more than 70% of our popular names with our Trans-Tasman cousins.

2. Every state and territory is a little different when it comes to names

Queensland is crazy for royal baby names – any name chosen by royalty will invariably rise in popularity this state. New South Wales is the only state with Arabic names in the Top 100 – Muhammad would be in the Top 30 there if all spellings were combined. Tasmanians adore vintage names, Western Australians tend to shun the classics for the contemporary, the Northern Territory has many names of Indigenous significance, and South Australians love a quirky middle name. The ACT has the strictest naming laws, and are therefore the most conservative at choosing baby names. Victorians are the name nerds of Australia – they are deeply interested in name trends, worry about popularity, and are the most likely to announce their baby’s name in the newspapers. I probably couldn’t function (as a blogger) without them.

3. Rural and regional Australians are the best at choosing interesting names

I love name stories and birth notices from country Australia, because they always have the most diverse selection of names, and the most unusual names and colourful name combinations. If it wasn’t for local newspapers, I don’t think I could keep doing the Birth Announcements each week.

4. Australians are patriotic namers

When I first started Waltzing More Than Matilda, I couldn’t help wondering if anyone would be interested in a blog about Australian names, and more importantly, I wasn’t sure if Australians would be interested!

Happily, my doubts have been proven wrong, because every day people come to the blog searching for Indigenous Australian names, names of Australian plants, names of Australian towns and cities, names of famous Australians, and asking for “patriotic Australian names” to use for their son or daughter.

It seems that there are many people at least considering a name with an Australian “flavour” for their children.

5. Australian parents are AWESOME namers!

There’s a vocal, mean-spirited and ignorant group of people who think it’s fun (or funny) to insist that Australians are too stupid or tasteless to be allowed to name their own children. According to this mob, who often seem to work in the media, you only have to read a few birth notices to see that Australian babies are given increasingly bizarre “made up names” with a bewildering range of spellings and punctuation that render them barely comprehensible.

Well, I read birth notices every day, and have done for years, and I can tell you that that is absolute tripe. Most babies are given fairly common names like Emily and Liam, and even less common names are usually traditional like Walter and Patricia, familiar like Axel and Clementine, or are from other cultures, like Malini and Ngemba. Variant spellings are generally low-key and easily coped with, such as Scarlette or Jaxson – out of the thousands of babies’ names I read each year, perhaps four or five have given me real difficulties in understanding them.

Australian parents, let me tell you that you are doing a great job! A brilliant job! An outstanding job at naming your babies! You make reading birth announcements a joy and an adventure!

Whether you chose the name Audrey or Behati. Whether you preferred Thomas or Zephyr. If you picked Felix or Kylen or Huckleberry or Lenny or Percival or Diamond. Opted for Eloise or Mietta or Taiyah or Rafferty or Storm or Xanthe. If your heart told you that the perfect name was Acacia or Digger or Lawson. Or you knew straight away that only Jack or Charlotte or Hamish would do. You all did the right thing, and you all did very well.

You impress and amaze me every day. Thank you.

Top Baby Names in Queensland for 2013

06 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

name popularity, name trends, popular names

GIRLS

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

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

GIRLS NAME TRENDS

Biggest Risers: Aria (+38), Indigo (+27 at least), Lola (+27), Nevaeh (+25), Willow (+19), Amity (+18 at least), Anna (+17 at least)

Biggest Fallers: Skye (-35), Molly (-33), Heidi (-28), Taylor (-27 at least), Tahlia (-22 at least)

New: Amity, Anna, April, Ayla, Eliza, Indi, Indigo, Isabel, Olive, Penelope

Gone: Amy, Arabella, Brooke, Caitlin, Gabriella, Kate, Makayla, Tahlia, Taylor

Comments: Penelope and Indigo join another Top 100, while fast-rising Amity and Nevaeh appear to be Queensland phenomena. Indie and Charlie have the most number of spelling variants in the girls Top 100. Ella moves up one place to join the Top 10.

BOYS TRENDS

Biggest Risers: Parker (+29), Chase (+25), Nathaniel (+24 at least), Theodore (+22 at least), Hudson (+19), George (+16), Hugo (+14)

Biggest Fallers: Nathan and Tyson (-22), Declan (-21), Mitchell (-20), Aiden (-17)

New: Bentley, Felix, Jax, Jaxson, John, Lewis, Louis, Nathaniel, Theodore, Wyatt

Gone: Adam, Callum, David, Harley, Marcus, Phoenix, Zane

Comments: Nathaniel joins another Top 100. Harrison climbs 9 places to join the Top 100 for the first time. Fun royal name fact: George, Alexander, and Louis all rose in popularity, with Louis joining the Top 100 for the first time.

Waltzing with …. Candelaria

02 Sunday Feb 2014

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

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Canarian names, Marian titles, name history, name meaning, name trends, nicknames, Spanish names

Candlemas

Today is the Feast of Candlemas, which commemorates the presentation of Jesus at the Temple and the Purification of Mary. Traditionally, there is a blessing of the candles to be used by the church that year, followed by a procession around the church with the congregation holding lighted candles, singing hymns of praise. People can also ask for a blessing on their own personal candles.

The feast follows the story given in the Gospel of Luke, where Mary and Joseph took the infant Jesus to the Temple in Jerusalem 40 days after his birth for Mary’s ritual purification after childbirth, and the redemption of a first-born son, according to the Law of Moses. Luke notes that Mary and Joseph sacrificed a pair of pigeons or doves, which was the option offered to the poor – wealthy people sacrificed a lamb.

While in the Temple, the Holy Family encountered an elderly pair of prophets named Simeon and Anna, who prayed for Jesus, prophesying that he would redeem Israel and bring enlightenment to the world. This is significant as the first public recognition of Jesus as a future religious leader, and his first entry into a house of religion.

We know that the Presentation of Jesus at the Temple has been celebrated by the Christian church since at least the 4th century, but its connection with candles only seems to have begun in the Middle Ages. As candles don’t play any role in the Gospel story, one might suspect that the custom began because in Europe, early February marks the midpoint of winter, when it starts to become noticeably lighter. Because Jesus was prophesied to be a “light … to the Gentiles”, there was a natural link between celebrating the return of the sun’s light with the “light of the world”.

Candlemas has many secular traditions associated with it, especially ones connected with agriculture; as the half-way point of winter, Candlemas was a handy reference point. Farmers were meant to have half their winter grain stores left by Candlemas, and it was the date that poultry was supposed to begin laying. It was also the traditional day to bring cattle in from the hay meadows so that the land could be prepared for another crop.

Weather lore is also a Candlemas tradition. In Britain, a saying is: If Candlemas Day is clear and bright, winter will take another flight. If Candlemas bring cloud or rain, winter is gone and will not come again. In the United States, they have the German tradition of Groundhog Day on Candlemas, when folklore says groundhogs will only come out of their burrow if it is cloudy, meaning that spring is on its way; if it is sunny, the groundhog will retreat back into the burrow for six more snoozy weeks of hibernation. In France, they think the opposite is true: a cloudy Candlemas means forty more days of winter, and in Italy, Candlemas is supposed to be the last cold day of the season.

In Australia, we cannot share in these wintry traditions, and as Candlemas often falls during the bushfire season of total fire bans, it would be foolhardy, not to mention illegal, to be messing around with lighted candles at this time. However, Candlemas is also supposed to mark of the end of the Christmas season, and this probably works better in Australia than Europe now, because it is around this time of the year that the Christmas holidays end.

There is a name especially associated with this festival. Candelaria is a Spanish name meaning “Candlemas”, which can be given in honour of the day. It can also be seen as a reference to Our Lady of Candelaria, one of the titles of the Virgin Mary. The Virgin of Candelaria is especially venerated in the Canary Islands, and we learned about this mysterious figure when we covered the name Chaxiraxi late last year. Her feast day is August 15, but she has another on February 2, linking her to Candlemas.

Candelaria is a rather gorgeous Spanish girl’s name, another of the many names which reference light, and in this case, a promise of approaching spring (or in Australia, the promise of cooler weather, which can’t come soon enough for my liking).

Candelaria may seem extravagant to some, and others may worry that the word “candle” is too obvious within it, but it could be used as a middle name if it seems too spectacular as a first name. I think it would be a marvellous name for anyone born around this time of year, and may be especially attractive to those with Spanish or Canarian heritage. The nickname Candy seems dated, but Aria would be smack bang on trend.

POLL RESULT
Candelaria received an approval rating of 42%. 32% of people hated the name, while only 7% loved it.

The Top Baby Names in Western Australia for 2013

28 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

name popularity, name trends, popular names

GIRLS

  1. Olivia
  2. Charlotte
  3. Ava
  4. Emily
  5. Ruby
  6. Ella
  7. Chloe
  8. Sophie
  9. Amelia
  10. Mia
  11. Grace
  12. Isabella
  13. Sienna
  14. Isla
  15. Lily
  16. Matilda
  17. Hannah
  18. Lucy and Zoe
  19. Emma and Sophia
  20. Harper and Jasmine
  21. Georgia
  22. Scarlett
  23. Summer
  24. Layla and Jessica
  25. Alexis and Ivy
  26. Imogen
  27. Abigail
  28. Zara
  29. Evie
  30. Sofia
  31. Eva
  32. Willow
  33. Violet
  34. Alyssa and Madison
  35. Isabelle
  36. Mackenzie
  37. Holly and Stella
  38. Elizabeth and Indiana
  39. Savannah
  40. Evelyn
  41. Lilly
  42. Sarah
  43. Mila
  44. Bella and Paige
  45. Alice, Maddison and Phoebe
  46. Amelie
  47. Anna, Annabelle and Hayley
  48. Poppy
  49. Addison, Aria, Ellie and Samantha
  50. Aaliyah
BOYS

  1. Jack
  2. Oliver
  3. Noah
  4. William
  5. Lucas
  6. James
  7. Mason
  8. Ethan
  9. Lachlan
  10. Harrison
  11. Thomas
  12. Jacob
  13. Joshua
  14. Liam
  15. Cooper
  16. Daniel
  17. Jaxon
  18. Samuel and Xavier
  19. Charlie and Riley
  20. Alexander, Benjamin and Hudson
  21. Max
  22. Tyler
  23. Isaac
  24. Harry and Hunter
  25. Jake
  26. Jayden
  27. Jackson and Logan
  28. Michael
  29. Levi
  30. Luke
  31. Connor and Flynn
  32. Henry
  33. Blake
  34. Dylan, Elijah and Oscar
  35. Matthew
  36. Leo and Nate
  37. Ryan and Zachary
  38. Braxton and Lincoln
  39. Mitchell and Seth
  40. Finn
  41. Chase and Kai
  42. Nicholas
  43. George
  44. Sebastian
  45. Nathan
  46. Beau and Owen
  47. Aiden
  48. Archer and Eli
  49. Marcus
  50. Joseph and Ryder

GIRLS NAME TRENDS

Biggest Risers: Violet (+11), Alyssa, Harper and Sofia (+9), Evie (+8)

Biggest Fallers: Chelsea (-18 at least), Hayley and Maddison (-13), Kayla (-11 at least), Lilly and Poppy (-11)

New: Aaliyah, Ellie, Samantha

Gone: Caitlin, Chelsea, Indi, Isabel, Jade, Kayla, Leah, Madeleine, Maya, Mikayla, Milla, Molly, Rose, Skye

Comments: A stripped-back girls list, as many names drop off, but few join. Samantha rejoins another list of popular names – could a reshuffle at Channel Seven have been an influence?

BOYS NAME TRENDS

Biggest risers: Harrison (+17), Lincoln (+12), Hudson (+11), George (+8 at least), Elijah and Finn (+8)

Biggest fallers: Aiden (-18), Dylan (-12), Nicholas and Ryan (-11), Eli (-10)

New: Archer, George, Joseph, Marcus, Ryder

Gone: Adam, Archie, Austin, Caleb, Declan, Patrick

Comment: Royal George enters the Top 50; this name does seem to be doing pretty well. Harrison and Mason both enter the Western Australian Top 10 for the first time. A blow for Western Australia blogger Ebony, who dislikes the name Lachlan and is hoping it is on its way out – it rose 4 places and is back in the Top 10.

Celebrity Baby News: Tim and Michelle Ross

28 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, name trends, nicknames, vintage names

606499-tim-ross

KIIS FM radio star Tim “Rosso” Ross, and his wife Michelle, welcomed their second child on Australia Day and have named their son Bobby Arrow. Bobby Ross has a big brother named Bugsy, aged 2. Bugsy’s birth was announced on the blog.

You may remember a reader wrote in to the blog to find a baby name that would go well as a brother to their son Bugsy, and also decided on a vintage short form to match it. Arrow may be the logical next step from Archer and Fletcher, and seems like a name with a lot of potential.

(Photo shows Tim, Michelle and Bugsy)

The Top 100 Baby Names in Victoria for 2013

25 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

name popularity, name trends, popular names

GIRLS

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

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

GIRLS NAME TRENDS

Biggest Risers: Penelope (+105), Aria and Samantha (+58), Indigo (+42), Sofia (+32), Evelyn (+30), Eloise and Olive (+28), Mikayla (+25)

Biggest Fallers: Claire (-33), Maddison and Piper (-25), Ebony (-21 at least), Gemma (-18 at least)

New: Amelie, Aria, Daisy, Eloise, Harriet, Indigo, Lexi, Mikayla, Samantha

Gone: Billie, Bonnie, Charlie, Ebony, Gemma, Kayla, Kiara, Natalie, Sara

Comments: I feel I have been properly punished for my playful Penelope-placating, for it has pushed its way over 100 places into another Top 100! Perhaps the 6% of gloomy doomsayers who said it was already too popular have had their perceptions proved perfectly pertinent.

BOYS NAME TRENDS

Biggest Risers: Nathaniel (+38), Lewis (+32), Spencer (+28), Lincoln (+27), Hudson and Louis (+24), Ali (+22), Eli and Leo (+20)

Biggest Fallers: Declan (-27 at least), Marcus (-27), Kai (-23 at least), Hayden (-20), Jett (-17 at least)

New: Ali, David, Jesse, Joel, Jude, Lewis, Nathaniel, Sam

Gone: Anthony, Christopher, Declan, Gabriel, Jett, Kai, Seth, Tyson

Comments: Mason entered the Top 10 in Victoria for the first time, rising a sedate 8 spots to do so. Declan, which was rising in tune with US trends, has suddenly dropped off the Top 100 in line with UK (and NSW) trends.

The Top Names in the Australian Capital Territory for 2013

23 Thursday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

name popularity, name trends, popular names

GIRLS

  1. Chloe
  2. Ava
  3. Charlotte
  4. Olivia
  5. Amelia
  6. Mia
  7. Sophie
  8. Emily
  9. Sophia
  10. Grace
  11. Ella
  12. Matilda
  13. Isabella
  14. Emma
  15. Zoe
  16. Lucy
  17. Georgia
  18. Ruby
  19. Zara
  20. Elizabeth
  21. Imogen
  22. Sienna
  23. Abigail
  24. Evelyn
  25. Lily
  26. Hannah
  27. Eva
  28. Isla
  29. Phoebe
  30. Sarah
  31. Audrey
  32. Eleanor
  33. Ivy
  34. Layla
  35. Violet
  36. Annabelle
  37. Hayley
  38. Bella
  39. Jessica
  40. Scarlett
  41. Stella
  42. Alice
  43. Aria
  44. Ariana
  45. Evie
  46. Isabelle
  47. Josephine
  48. Paige
  49. Penelope
  50. Alexandra
  51. Alexis
  52. Alyssa
  53. Amelie
  54. Eden
  55. Madeleine
  56. Samantha
  57. Aaliyah
  58. Annabel
  59. Chelsea
  60. Ellie
  61. Eloise
  62. Elsie
  63. Harper
  64. Lara
  65. Mackenzie
  66. Maya
  67. Summer
  68. Victoria
  69. Willow
  70. Addison
  71. Anna
  72. April
  73. Asher
  74. Heidi
  75. Jade
  76. Leila
  77. Madeline
  78. Mila
  79. Neve
  80. Poppy
  81. Rose
  82. Skye
  83. Sofia
  84. Abby
  85. Amber
  86. Asha
  87. Ashley
  88. Charli
  89. Claire
  90. Freya
  91. Jasmine
  92. Laura
  93. Leah
  94. Maddison
  95. Milla
  96. Naomi
  97. Natalie
  98. Adele
  99. Alana
  100. Allegra
  101. Annika
  102. Arabella
  103. Caitlin
  104. Elise
  105. Eve
  106. Harriet
BOYS

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

GIRLS NAME TRENDS

Biggest Risers: Bella (+39), Annabel (+37), Stella (+36), Hayley (+31), Samantha (+21)

Biggest Fallers: Jasmine (-71), Maddison (-59), Claire (-46), Harriet (-44), Sofia (-40)

New: Aaliyah, Abby, Adele, Alana, Allegra, Alyssa, Annika, Arabella, Ariana, Asha, Asher, Ashley, Charli, Eden, Elise, Harper, Josephine, Leah, Leila, Madeline, Milla, Naomi, Natalie, Neve, Penelope, Skye, Summer, Victoria, Violet

Comments: -bel and -ella names doing well. Lots of new names starting with A. Naomi and Penelope back on the list after being requested as featured names on WMTM – are our blog readers in tune with zeitgeist?

BOYS NAME TRENDS

Biggest Risers: Finn (+46), Hugo (+42), Edward (+38), Ashton and Hunter (+32)

Biggest Fallers: Andrew (-52), Jasper (-50), Marcus (-49), Luke (-48), Charles (-46)

New: Aidan, Aiden, Arlo, Austin, Beau, Billy, Bryaden, Brock, Callum, Dominic, Fergus, Felix, Finlay, Heath, Hugh, Jett, John, Lincoln, Mitchell, Rory, Ryder

Comment: Celtic names seem all the rage, with Finn the biggest riser, joined by new names Finlay, Fergus, Callum, and Aidan. Bella and Edward both high risers – is someone having a laugh? (But Jasper fell …) Fun royal-watching fact: George, Louis, and Alexander all rose in popularity.

NOTE: Because of its small population size, the Australian Capital Territory’s top names are its complete name data. For the same reason, its charts are highly volatile.

True Blue Names for Girls

19 Sunday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Name Themes and Lists

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

animal names, Australian idioms, Biblical names, bird names, celebrity baby names, colour names, english names, fictional namesakes, flower names, French names, gemstone names, German names, Greek names, middle names, modern classic names, name history, name meaning, name popularity, name trends, names from movies, nature names, nicknames, Norman-French names, Persian names, plant names, popular names, surname names, unisex names

bluewren-male

It will be Australia Day in a week’s time, and rather than cover just one name, I am suggesting names with a “blue” theme, in honour of Australia, where the phrase “true blue” has taken on its own patriotic meaning.

Azura

The name Azura is an elaboration of the colour name Azure. Azure is an intense light blue, the colour of a clear sky on a hot summer’s day. In the patriotic Song of Australia, the lyrics describe how all about is azure bright, and the bird called the azure kingfisher is native to Australia. The English word azure comes from French azur, and is taken from the blue mineral lapis lazuli – lapis means “stone” in Latin, while lazuli is from lāžaward: the Persian name for the mineral, derived from Lazhward, a place where it was mined. According to Jewish tradition, Azura was one of the daughters of Adam and Eve, and the wife of her brother Seth. Azura is a popular name in science fiction and fantasy, most notably in Skyrim, where Azura is the Lady of Twilight who rules over the realm of Moonshadow. Last year, NRL star Anthony Minichiello, and designer Terry Biviano, welcomed their daughter Azura. This is pretty and exotic while still similar to names like Arya and Zara.

Bluebell

The bluebell is a type of hyacinth; a spring bulb which grows wild in the woodlands of Europe and is also a popular garden plant. Its name comes from its violet-blue colour, and mass of bell-like petals. Several other unrelated flowers around the world are named bluebell, and in Australia we have the Royal Bluebell (Wahlenbergia gloriosa). This deep violet wildflower grows abundantly in the Australian Alps, and is the floral emblem of the Australian Capital Territory. Summer flowering, it is hardy and easily grown in the garden; however, it is protected in the wild, and cannot be picked or collected. Bluebell came into use as a girls name during the 19th century, along with other flower names, but doesn’t have a Victorian vintage vibe – it seems hip and funky. I have seen this a few times as a middle name, but would love to see it boldly upfront.

Delphine

Delphine is the French form of Delphina, which can be understood as meaning “from Delphi”. However, the name reminds me of dolphins, whose scientific family name is Delphinidae, from the Greek delphus, meaning “womb”, to indicate that although they look fish-like, as mammals, they bear live young. The Greek town of Delphi, the home of the famous Delphic Oracle in ancient times, is also said to mean “womb”, as it was meant to be the navel of the earth goddess Gaia. The grey-blue colouring of the dolphin suggested this name to me, and there are several species of dolphin which live in, or migrate to, the waters surrounding Australia. Since ancient times, people have been fascinated by dolphins, and there are many stories of wild dolphins rescuing people, helping surfers and swimmers in trouble, or even protecting humans from shark attacks. Their high intelligence and playful behaviour make them appealing companions, and there are several places in Australia where you can swim with and interact with wild dolphins. Delphine is a pretty dolphin-related name for anyone who loves these free-spirited sea creatures, and has Dell and Fifi as potential nicknames.

Indigo

Indigo is one of the seven colours of the rainbow, a dark shade of blue. It was Sir Isaac Newton who introduced indigo as one of the colours of the spectrum, because in the mid-17th century, when he began his work with prisms, the East India Company had begun importing indigo dye to Britain, where it was used to colour clothing a deep blue. Indigo dye comes from the plant Indigofera tinctoria, native to tropical Asia, and the word indigo comes from the Greek, meaning “Indian dye”. Indigo is a rather controversial colour, because Sir Isaac Newton decided there had to be seven colours to match the seven notes of a scale and seven days of the week, and scientists question whether indigo is really a colour of the spectrum, or just the point where blue deepens. Even more confusingly, Sir Isaac Newton seems to have used the word indigo to mean the colour we call blue. Indigo has strong New Age associations, because it is seen as a particularly spiritual colour connected to psychic power. Indigo is a rather trendy girls name in Australia, a favourite choice of celebrities; rising with other Ind- names, it is #137 in Victoria.

Jasmine

I would not have considered this for a list of Blue Names, except that while writing it, Australian actress Cate Blanchett won a Golden Globe for her role in the film Blue Jasmine. There are about twelve species of jasmine native to Australia; these climbing vines come from tropical and subtropical areas of Queensland and northern New South Wales. The flowers are delicate and white, and have a sweet, intoxicating scent; they are both fragile and strong. The word jasmine comes from the Latinised Persian yasamen, meaning “gift from God” – there really is something quite heavenly about jasmine. The name Jasmine is a modern classic which has charted here since the 1960s, and soared during the 1970s to make the Top 100 for the 1980s. It peaked in the early 2000s at #14, and is still stable in the Top 100. It is #36 nationally, #33 in New South Wales, #28 in Victoria, #41 in Queensland, #31 in South Australia, #24 in Western Australia, #59 in Tasmania, #15 in the Northern Territory and #20 in the Australian Capital Territory.

Sailor

This name occurred to me because the Royal Australian Navy winter uniform is dark blue (and the summer uniform has dark blue trim); Sailor could be used as a name to honour a family naval tradition. Sailor has been used as a first name since at least the 19th century, and was used for both sexes, although more common for boys. It received greater recognition in the 1990s, when American model Christie Brinkley gave the name to her daughter, and since then has been overwhelmingly seen as a girls name – perhaps partly because it fits in so well with the trend for names such as Kayla, Layla and Tayla. Weatherman Grant Denyer named his daughter Sailor in 2011, his wife Cheryl a fan of the name ever since Christie Brinkley’s choice. The name Sailor probably came originally from the occupational surname, in which case it can be from the German seiler, and mean “ropemaker”, or English, where it means “dancer, acrobat”, from the Norman French sailleor, meaning “dancer, leaper”. The German origin seems to be more common, and as sailors once worked with ropes, still seems to fit as a sailing name.

Sapphira

A Greek name meaning “sapphire”, which simply means “blue stone”. However, it is likely that the ancient Greeks were referring to lapis lazuli when they used the word – it comes from the Hebrew sappir, meaning “lapis lazuli”. In the New Testament, Sapphira was an early Christian who, along with her husband, was struck dead for concealing money from the church and lying about it. It’s hard not to think that they were executed, although the Biblical account is vague on the details. It’s one of the creepier and more troubling parts of the Bible, and doesn’t really show the early church in a good light. A more pleasant connection is the intelligent and loyal blue dragon named Saphira in Christopher Paolini’s Inheritance series of fantasy novels. Crime novelist Tara Moss chose the name Sapphira for her baby daughter in 2011, apparently because she had blue eyes. Sapphira is an exceptionally beautiful and elegant name which can also reference the sapphire mining trade in Australia.

Sky

The atmosphere as it appears from Earth; the word comes from the Norse word for “cloud” (you can see our ancestors came from a place where skies tended to be cloudy!). On a clear day the sky appears blue because air scatters blue sunlight more than it scatters red. Because of this, we give as a truism that the sky is blue, even though it appears in a range of colours depending on the conditions, and there is a colour named sky blue because of that. Blue skies are symbolic of happiness and good times ahead, and blue skying is to think creatively – to think that the sky is the limit, to reach for the sky. Although there are blue skies all over the world, in Australia the strong sunlight and lack of cloudiness mean we see a lot of blue sky, and intensely blue skies – the patriotic song Awake! Awake, Australia! mentions our “bright blue skies”. Sky is a unisex name which has never charted in Australia, but its similarity to Skye and Skyla will make it seem feminine here.

True

An English word which can be understood as meaning “genuine, trusty, faithful”, ultimately from an ancient root meaning “steady, firm”. A common saying in Australia is to describe someone as a true blue Aussie, as featured in the John Williamson song, True Blue. The phrase true blue goes back to medieval times, when the colour blue symbolised faith and constancy. Although theories abound as why this was so, the most likely explanation is that it’s from the blue-dyed cloth produced in the town of Coventry, famous for not fading with washing, and thus remaining “true”. Later on, the phrase became associated with the Presybterian Church, and later still, the Tory Party, and their “true blue supporters”. In Australia, far from “true blue” having these conservative associations, in the 19th century it was used to describe those working class men who remained true to their labour principles, and was thus a left-wing term. Gradually, true blue came to mean anyone loyal to Australia and its values. True can be used as a name for either sex; on a girl, it seems as if it could be short for Trudy and similar names.

Wren

Australian wrens are similar in appearance, but unrelated to the wrens of Europe and the Americas. In some species, such as the Superb Fairywren and Splendid Fairywren, the breeding male has a very distinctive and beautiful blue plumage in contrast to the grey-brown tones of the females and juniors. In other species and subspecies, both males and females are bright blue, or have blue patches. Because they are tiny, pretty, and have an attractive range of birdsongs, we love it when fairywrens visit our gardens. Seeing a group of colourful wrens flutter through the bushes is the closest thing to having fairies in the garden that most people will experience. Another charming fairywren fact is that the male will present brightly coloured flower petals when courting a female, which to human eyes looks like bringing a bouquet of flowers. Wren has been used as a first name since the 17th century, and from the beginning was unisex, given roughly equally to both sexes, and possibly influenced by the surname, which comes directly from the bird. Today it is usually thought of a girls name, and although I can see it on a boy, the fairywren seems to render it more feminine than masculine. Elsewhere Wren might seem a humble choice as a name, while here I think it’s much brighter and more cheerful.

POLL RESULTS
The public’s favourite names were Wren, Indigo and Delphine, and their least favourite were Sailor, True and Sky.

The Top 50 Most Popular Names from Baby Center Australia for 2013

13 Monday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Baby Center Australia, name trends, popular names

GIRLS

  1. Charlotte
  2. Ava
  3. Chloe
  4. Emily
  5. Olivia
  6. Zoe
  7. Lily
  8. Sophie
  9. Amelia
  10. Sophia
  11. Ella
  12. Isabella
  13. Ruby
  14. Sienna
  15. Mia
  16. Grace
  17. Emma
  18. Ivy
  19. Layla
  20. Abigail
  21. Isla
  22. Hannah
  23. Zara
  24. Lucy
  25. Evie
  26. Annabelle
  27. Madison
  28. Alice
  29. Georgia
  30. Maya
  31. Madeline
  32. Audrey
  33. Scarlett
  34. Isabelle
  35. Chelsea
  36. Mila
  37. Holly
  38. Indiana
  39. Poppy
  40. Harper
  41. Sarah
  42. Alyssa
  43. Jasmine
  44. Imogen
  45. Hayley
  46. Phoebe
  47. Eva
  48. Evelyn
  49. Mackenzie
  50. Ayla
BOYS

  1. Oliver
  2. Jack
  3. Jackson
  4. William
  5. Ethan
  6. Charlie
  7. Lucas
  8. Cooper
  9. Lachlan
  10. Noah
  11. Liam
  12. Alexander
  13. Max
  14. Isaac
  15. Thomas
  16. Xavier
  17. Oscar
  18. Benjamin
  19. Aidan
  20. Mason
  21. Samuel
  22. James
  23. Levi
  24. Riley
  25. Harrison
  26. Ryan
  27. Henry
  28. Jacob
  29. Joshua
  30. Leo
  31. Zac
  32. Harry
  33. Hunter
  34. Flynn
  35. Archie
  36. Tyler
  37. Elijah
  38. Hayden
  39. Jayden
  40. Blake
  41. Archer
  42. Ashton
  43. Sebastian
  44. Zachary
  45. Lincoln
  46. Mitchell
  47. Luca
  48. Nathan
  49. Kai
  50. Connor

GIRLS TRENDS

Biggest risers: Layla (+19), Ava (+18), Abigail (+13), Evie (+11)

Biggest fallers: Isabelle (-26), Mackenzie (-21), Scarlett (-17), Madison and Jasmine (-16), Eva (-12)

New to list: Ivy, Alice, Georgia, Maya, Madeline, Audrey, Holly, Indiana, Poppy, Harper, Alyssa, Imogen, Hayley, Phoebe, Evelyn, Ayla

BOYS TRENDS

Biggest risers: Alexander (+14), Charlie, Isaac and Riley (+13), Jack (+12)

Biggest fallers: Nathan (-18), Joshua and Luca (-16), James (-15), Thomas and Jacob (-11), Connor (-10)

New to list: Levi, Leo, Zac, Archie, Tyler, Elijah, Hayden, Archer, Ashton, Sebastian, Zachary, Lincoln, Kai

Could These Be The Top 100 Names of the Future?

07 Tuesday Jan 2014

Posted by A.O. in Naming Issues

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

birth notices, name trends, predictions

imagesThese are my picks for names to keep an eye on, based on certain names that kept turning up in birth announcements, but are not yet on the national Top 100.

GIRLS

Would Already Be Top 100 If Combined Spellings Were Counted

  • Alana/Alanna/Alannah – Alana is already Top 100 in Victoria
  • Lexi/Lexie
  • Indi/Indie/Indy
  • Macey/Maci/Macie/Macy
  • Mali/Mahli/Marlee/Marley/Marli/Marlie

On Track to Reach the Top 100

  • Bonnie – maybe as soon as this year, already Top 100 in Victoria
  • Harriet – maybe as soon as this year, already Top 100 in Victoria
  • Billie – maybe as soon as this year, already Top 100 in Victoria
  • April – maybe as soon as next year, only just outside the Top 100
  • Asha – maybe as soon as next year, only just outside the Top 100
  • Pippa – probably within the next couple of years, already Top 100 in some states
  • Elsie – probably within the next couple of years
  • Maggie – perhaps within the next couple of years
  • Florence – perhaps within the next 5 years
  • Freya – perhaps within the next 5 years
  • Kaylee – perhaps within the next 5 years
  • Adeline – perhaps within the next 10 years
  • Georgie – perhaps within the next 10 years
  • Mabel – perhaps within the next 10 years

Possible Future Top 100 Names

  • Anastasia
  • Felicity
  • Maisie
  • Peyton/Payton
  • Darci/Darcie/Darcy
  • Zahlee/Zahli/Zali/Zarli
  • Amity
  • Makenna
  • Everley
  • Indigo

Long Shots

  • Clementine
  • Cleo
  • Emmeline
  • Susannah

BOYS

Would Already Be Top 100 If Combined Spellings Were Counted

  • Louis/Lewis
  • Caden/Cayden/Kaden/Kayden
  • Cobi/Cobie/Coby/Kobi/Kobe/Koby

On Track to Reach the Top 100

  • Spencer – maybe as soon as this year, already Top 100 in Victoria
  • Zane – probably within the next couple of years
  • Vincent – perhaps within the next couple of years
  • Jimmy – perhaps within the next 5 years
  • Theodore – perhaps within the next 5 years

Possible Future Top 100 Names

  • Jude
  • Cruz
  • Ari
  • Axel
  • Jax
  • Xander/Zander
  • Asher
  • Sonny
  • Parker
  • Nash
  • Lenny
  • Kade
  • Alfie
  • Cohen
  • Sidney
  • Maximus

Long Shots

  • Camden
  • Layne

NOTE: The future of boys names is much less predictable, because in a lot of ways parents are more conservative when naming girls. Girls tended to have traditional names with a history that could be tracked, while boys much more likely to have “new” names that have only recently come into common use. On the other hand, when girls were given unusual names, they tended to be much more out there than a boy with an unusual name.

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