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Tag Archives: popular names

Waltzing With … Eve

25 Sunday Sep 2016

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

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Biblical names, celebrity baby names, epithets and titles, fictional namesakes, Greek names, hebrew names, international name popularity, Irish names, modern classics, mythological names, name history, name meaning, name popularity, name trends, names from movies, nicknames, popular names, saints names, UK name popularity, US name popularity

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The Spring Equinox has just passed, and I’m planning on doing lots of gardening in the school holidays. So here’s a name suited to the season of new life and growth.

Biblical Namesake
Eve is derived from the Hebrew name Hawwah (in modern Hebrew, Chavah) which comes from both the word for “breath” and for “life”. It can be translated as “she who lives” or “source of life”.

The goddess Asherah, who was the wife of God in early Semitic tradition, held the title Chawat, which is the source of the name. Interestingly the word is from the same root as the word for “snake”, as these creatures are symbols of wisdom, and serpents were sacred to Asherah.

As the first pages of the Old Testament tell us, Eve was the first woman, created by God as a wife for the first man, Adam. God fashioned Eve from Adam’s rib while he slept. The story is quite similar to a Sumerian myth: in this case, the word for “rib” was a pun on the word for “life”, which explains why Eve was made from this body part.

Eve and Adam began in complete harmony with nature, living in the Garden of Eden as caretakers to the plants and animals, and eating only fruit and other plants. The couple were in a state of blissful innocence, and wore no clothes, for the Bible tells us that they were “naked and not ashamed”.

Apart from the simple requirements of daily gardening and animal husbandry, a raw food diet, strict veganism, and total nudity, God really only had one major rule and that was not to eat fruit from the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, which is an impressive way of saying The Tree of Knowledge of All Things, or even just The Tree of Knowledge. He decreed that the punishment for this crime would be an immediate death sentence.

The Tree of Knowledge was right in the middle of the Garden of Eden so you couldn’t avoid seeing it, and it was an especially beautiful tree, laden with the most delicious-looking fruit. This was the start of the original “trouble in paradise”.

The snake was said to be the craftiest and most cunning of all the animals God had created, and in those days it walked upon legs. It was also able to talk, or perhaps Eve and Adam had the innate ability to understand the speech of all creatures.

This crafty, leggy, chatty snake schmoozed up to Eve and, without ever actually suggesting this would be a good idea, or that she should do it, the snake cleverly planted the idea in Eve’s mind that eating the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge would open her mind to untold wisdom. It would make her the intellectual equal of God, and the experience wouldn’t lead to death after all.

So what with these cunning arguments, and the tree being so delectable and accessible, Eve ate the fruit. She handed it over to Adam, and he ate it as well. It’s worth pointing out that the Bible says that Adam was right next to Eve the whole time, and had presumably heard all the same crafty snake talk without butting in with any counter-arguments, or insisting they’d better leave right now. Nope, he just hoed right in on a forbidden fruit binge.

Their minds now open to all knowledge, the first bit of information they received was they were walking around in the nude, and that made them feel suddenly ashamed. Hastily they sewed themselves loincloths out of fig leaves, and then hid from God, because another vital bit of info they’d gotten was that they’d done something incredibly bad, and now had this horrible gnawing feeling, which was guilt.

Part the knowledge they had imbibed was the ability to pass the buck, because once God started asking them a few probing questions Adam was quick to pin it all on Eve, and Eve was just as fast shifting all the blame on the snake.

Of course when God learned the truth, the proverbial hit the fan and there were major penalties handed out. The snake became legless so he had to crawl in the dust, and from now on humans would hate and fear him. Eve would suffer horrible pain during childbirth so that sexual desire would be its own punishment, and she would be subservient to her husband. The earth itself would turn against Adam, so that he would have to work and suffer for every mouthful he ate.

Finally God banished Eve and Adam from the Garden of Eden, because he was afraid that now they knew everything their next step would be to eat from the Tree of Life, which was right next to the Tree of Knowledge, and gave immortality to those who ate from it. Mysteriously, this tree wasn’t mentioned before and God never warned them off it. But he was worried now, and set some fiery cherubim to guard it.

It was only after all these events that Adam gave Eve her name, to show that she would become the mother of all humanity. Before this, Adam just called her Woman. It’s food for thought that Eve’s name came only after she had lost her innocence, and that Adam only knew her name when he had eaten from the Tree of Knowledge. Eve is a name born out of hard-won wisdom.

According to Christian tradition, Adam and Eve repented of their sin and were forgiven by God. They ascended into Heaven upon the Resurrection of Christ, and have been canonised as saints, with their feast day being Christmas Eve, aptly enough.

There has been a tendency to see Eve as responsible for the Fall of Man. She is often cast in the role of temptress, and the phrase “the wisdom of Eve” refers to feminine wiles. It is further extrapolated that all women are somehow more sinful by nature, and the Bible is sometimes used to justify women being kept in submission, even though hardly anybody seems to think that men as a sex should have to struggle and suffer for every bite of food.

Eve is a fascinating character. Unlike Pandora, she was not given to man to plague him, but made to be his companion, “flesh of his flesh, bone of his bone”. She is the first mother yet she isn’t primarily a fertility figure, but one who is hungry for wisdom and brings knowledge to the world. In a sense, her act made the world as we know it – not the natural world created by God, but the human world of thoughts and ideas, of good and evil, of choices and consequences.

Name Information
Eve has been used as an English name since the Middle Ages, and was introduced by the Normans; there is a French saint named Eve who is the patron of the city of Dreux. The Latin form Eva was more common, but in everyday life the person might have been called Eve. The name has remained in use ever since, and in Ireland was sometimes used to Anglicise the name Aoife.

Eve first joined the charts in the 1950s at #409. The award-winning drama All About Eve came out in 1950, starring Anne Baxter as the scheming Eve Harrington. In the film, the name Eve is deliberately chosen to evoke a sense of deception. Another film of this decade was the 1957 The Three Faces of Eve, with Joanne Woodward winning the Best Actress Oscar for her portrayal of a woman with multiple personality disorder.

The name Eve stayed around the 400 mark for decades, but began climbing steeply in the 2000s. It joined the national Top 100 last year. Currently it is #87 nationally, #95 in New South Wales, #65 in Victoria, and #46 in the Australian Capital Territory Territory. Last year it was one of the fastest-rising names for girls, going up 14 places, and was a fast-rising name in Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory.

In the US the name Eve was almost continuously on the Top 1000 from the late 19th century until the mid 1980s, peaking in the early 20th century around the 400s. The name went off the charts in 1985, but reappeared in 1998 – the same year that rapper Eve Jeffers-Cooper, who performs under her first name only, began her career. Since then it has risen, and is now #475 and fairly stable.

In the UK, Eve joined the Top 100 in 1999, the same year British actor Clive Owen welcomed a daughter named Eve, and peaked in 2001 at #50. It left the Top 100 in 2010, the same year American rapper Eve began dating British entrepreneur Maximillion Cooper, now her husband. It is currently #161. Eve is still popular in Ireland, Northern Ireland, and Scotland, and is in common use in France.

Eve is an ancient name, but one that has gained a very modern image, as it’s a favourite in sci fi to give to a “first woman” of some kind (the first gynoid or clone, for example), and also works well as an acronym, such as the robot EVE – Extraterrestrial Vegetation Evaluator – in Wall-E.

This is a slim and trim modern classic underused for centuries due to the association with the biblical character, who is both our mother to revere, and blamed for our fall from grace. It is interesting that both Adam and Eve joined the charts in the 1950s, but Adam became popular almost immediately while Eve languished.

It’s never been able to match classic Eva (its Latin form) or popular Zoe (the Greek version), but it feels as if Eve’s day might be arriving. It fits in so perfectly with current trends for names such as Ava and Evelyn, and is a possible formal name for the popular nickname Evie.

Based on overseas trends, you wouldn’t expect Eve to go very much higher than it is already, but as every country has its own profile for Eve, we’ll have to wait and see what happens here.

POLL RESULTS
The name Eve received an overwhelming 99% approval rating, making it the highest-rated name of 2016. 46% of people loved the name Eve, and only one person disliked it. Nobody hated the name Eve.

(Painting is Adam et Eve au jardin d’Eden by Gustave-Claude-Etienne Courtois, 1853-1923)

Waltzing With … Carter

19 Sunday Jun 2016

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

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english names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, name history, name meaning, name trends, names from movies, names from television, New Zealand name popularity, pen names, popular names, UK name popularity, unisex names, US name popularity

Blonde

Famous Namesake
It’s cold and wet at the moment – just the right weather for curling up with a good book. But what if you want to curl up with a bad book? That’s what pulp fiction is for: cheap, disposable paperbacks that can entertain you for an hour or so.

Australia’s prolific prince of postwar pulp fiction was Carter Brown – the pen name of British-born Alan Yates. He came here during the war, and married an Australian woman he had met on leave. They lived in England for a while, but Alan’s articles and radio scripts kept getting rejected, so they returned to Sydney in 1948.

One of Alan’s jobs was producing the in-flight magazine for Qantas. In the evenings, he wrote a western, and went on to write horror, science fiction, and detective stories. At his publisher’s urging, he wrote his first full-length crime novel, Murder is My Mistress, which came out in 1954. It was so successful that Alan was contracted to become a full-time writer, turning out a novel every month for a weekly income plus royalties.

In the next 30 years, Alan wrote over 200 novels under the pen name Carter Brown, as well as 75 novellas. An individual title could sell up to 200 000 copies, and his total sales were 55 million. His books were second only to the Bible for the number of languages they were translated into.

His detectives included ditzy blonde private investigator Mavis Seidlitz, Hollywood screenwriter Larry Baker and his drunken assistant Boris Slivka, San Francisco lawyer Randy Roberts, and Lt. Al Wheeler, a policeman from fictional Pine County near LA.

The plots had beautiful, dangerous women, plenty of action, a bit of a laugh, and enough sex and violence to keep readers coming back for more. They could expect strippers, starlets, spankings, vampires, ghosts, aliens, witches, Satanists, psychiatrists, sexy Women’s Libbers, deadly yoga instructors, and rampant dwarfs.

There were loads of alliterative titles, like Bullet for My Baby, Honey, Here’s Your Hearse, Darling, You’re Doomed, and Cutie Wins a Corpse. Blondes were a favourite topic, featuring in Blonde Verdict, No Blonde is an Island, Blonde on the Rocks, and Blonde, Beautiful, and – BLAM!

The books were usually set in California, which was what readers expected. Alan hadn’t been to the United States when he first started, so wrote from his imagination, with some comic results. However, this didn’t bother his readership in Australia and Europe, most of whom hadn’t been to America either.

Once his books started being sold in the US in 1958, he did visit America and was able to add more realism. It was also America which fixed his pen name in place: he had sometimes published as Peter Carter Brown or Peter Carter-Brown, but it was felt Carter Brown would do better in the United States. A helpful rumour circulated that Carter Brown was the favourite author of President John F. Kennedy, which boosted sales.

Alan’s life was very different from that of his heroes, as he was a devoted family man who enjoyed a beer and a joke with friends. He spent nearly all his time writing, living in dread of deadlines, and surviving on coffee and Benzedrine to maintain the relentless pace. He dreamed of one day publishing a serious work, a historical novel set in Australia, but there was too much writing to be done.

Alan was no Raymond Chandler, but although he wrote pure pulp, it wasn’t complete trash. He was able to keep readers addicted through constant inventiveness while sticking to the same formula the publisher insisted on, and his humour, puns and literary allusions added sparkle to the text. Some of his works are still in print, and he has a loyal readership among fans of vintage crime fiction.

Alan won his only literary award a dozen years after his death, when he received the Ned Kelly Award for lifelong contribution.

Name Information
Carter is an English occupational surname for someone who transported goods, or who made a living building carts. It’s a very old surname, and may pre-date the Norman Conquest.

There are many people with the surname. Jimmy Carter, former American president; archaeologist Howard Carter who discovered the tomb of Tutankhamen; writer Angela Carter; country singer June Carter from The Carter Family, wife of Johnny Cash; Lynda Carter, who played Wonder Woman; Rubin Carter, the boxer known as “The Hurricane” who later worked to help people wrongfully convicted; and Shawn Carter, the rapper known as Jay Z, married to Beyoncé.

Famous Australian Carters include ornithologist Thomas Carter who found many bird specimens; entomologist Herbert Carter, beetle expert; physicist Brandon Carter, known for his work on black holes; photographer and film-maker Jeff Carter; influential businessman Bruce Carter; and high jumper Doris Carter, the first Australian female track and field athlete to make the Olympic finals.

Carter has been used as a personal name since at least the 17th century, and usually given to males. Famous namesakes include Carter Braxton, one of the signatories to the United States Declaration of Independence, and Carter Woodson, the African-American historian considered to be the father of Black History Month in the US.

An influential fictional character with the surname Carter is John Carter of Mars, an immortal Southern Virginian gentleman created by Edgar Rice Burroughs: practically every sci-fi adventure story since owes a debt to him. There’s also dime novel detective Nick Carter, and mob enforcer Jack Carter, from the cult film Get Carter.

Fictional characters with Carter as a first name include superheroes such as Carter Grayson from the Power Rangers, Carter Hall, otherwise known as the Hawkman, and Carter Slade, the original Ghost Rider. There’s also Carter Kane from Rick Riordan’s Kane Chronicles, a powerful teenage magician and the human host of the Egyptian god Horus.

In the US, Carter has been on the Top 1000 almost continuously for boys since the late 19th century. It has been climbing since 1980, joined the Top 100 for the first time in 2004, and is currently #24.

Carter began charting for girls in 2013, and is currently #533. Two female Carters from popular culture are tomboy Carter Mason in the Disney movie Princess Protection Program, played by Selena Gomez, and rebellious Carter Wilson, on the teen drama series Finding Carter.

In the UK, Carter has been in the Top 500 since the late 1990s and has been generally rising since 1999, rising steadily since 2010. It is currently #118, so not far outside the Top 100. Carter is a popular name in Northern Ireland, and is most popular in New Zealand, where it is #20 and rising. It only charts as a female name in the US.

In Australia, Carter debuted in the Top 100 in 2014, and last year went up 19 places to #79, making it one of the fastest rising names of 2015. Carter debuted at #83 in New South Wales, being one of the fastest rising names in the state, and was #39 in Queensland.

Carter fits right in with the surname trend, as well as with the other rising AR names, like Archer, Arlo, and Harvey. It sounds sleek and tailored, but also rugged and manly – a tough-talking guy who looks good in a suit. Like Carter? Join the club.

POLL RESULTS
Carter received an approval rating of 71%. 42% of people thought it was okay, but only 8% loved it.

Famous Name: Billie

08 Wednesday Jun 2016

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

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American names, celebrity baby names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, name history, name meaning, name popularity, name trends, names from television, nicknames, popular names, retro names, screen names, stage names, UK name popularity, unisex names, US name popularity

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After looking at the fastest-rising names in the Top 100 for last year, I thought it would be a good idea to add these names to the database if they hadn’t already been covered. This week we are starting with Billie, a name which has risen through television.

Name Information
Billie is traditionally considered a short form of names such as Wilhelmina, but more practically is used as a feminine form of Billy, short for William. In fact its gender lines are very blurry, because the name originated in the US in the 18th century as a spelling variant of Billy, and for quite some time there were more male Billies than female ones.

In the US, Billie charted for boys on the Top 1000 from 1880, not leaving it until the mid 1980s. It peaked in 1929 at #122, but last year there were just 10 baby boys named Billie. It began charting for girls in 1886, and was in the bottom portion of the Top 100 from 1928 to 1934 – as with the boys, the name peaked in 1929 and 1930 at #79. It left the Top 1000 in 1998, and last year there were 95 girls named Billie, with numbers continuing to fall for both sexes.

In the UK Billie has also charted for both boys and girls, although always much higher for girls. In the mid 1990s Billie was #182 for girls, and generally fell in popularity after that. After hitting a low in 2009 at #673, the name has risen and is now #439. Boys hit a peak in 1997 at 17 births, but since then has mostly around a handful of births per year; in 2014 there were 4 baby boys named Billie.

In Australia, the name has only ever charted as a female name. It first charted in the 1930s and 1940s, when it was around the 300s and 400s. This correlates with the biggest career success for seminal jazz star Billie Holiday, often known as Lady Day. Holiday was born Eleanora Fagan, and took the first part of her stage name from silent film star Billie Dove, called The American Beauty for her good looks (Dove was born Bertha Bohny, so in her case Billie was a screen name). The name’s peak in the US seems to fit better with the film star, as it peaked there before Billie Holiday’s career really began.

The name Billie disappeared from the Australian charts in the 1950s, when Billie Holiday’s career began to fail, embroiled in legal proroblems, drug addiction, and illness; she died in 1959. However it returned in the 1970s at #739, when there was a Billie Holiday revival. A film based on her autobiography called Lady Sings the Blues was released in 1972, with Diana Ross in the starring role, and the soundtrack was a huge success. In 1973, Billie Holiday was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

After a steep rise in the 1980s, the name Billie climbed more gradually, levelling off around the high 200s/low 300s towards the late 2000s. However, the name began zooming up the charts after 2010, when the hit TV drama series Offspring began screening. This starred Kat Stewart as the bold, brassy and brutally honest big sister Billie Proudman; she puts her wild child past behind her as she matures, and eventually helps her sister Nina raise her daughter.

Based on its trajectory, I predicted that Billie could be in the Top 100 by 2013, encouraged by the fact it was already in the Top 100 in Victoria. Instead it debuted in the national Top 100 in 2015, gaining 19 places or more to make #82. It made the Top 100 in New South Wales for the first time at #99, was the fastest-rising girl’s name in Victoria, going up 40 places to #57, and was #83 in Tasmania. Analysis of data from Sydney shows it is a favourite in the city’s wealthy northern suburbs.

There have been further boosts to the name in Australia, with soapie Home and Away introducing tomboy surfer Billie Ashford in late 2014, and attractive chef Billie McKay winning MasterChef in 2015. AFL star Chris Judd, and his wife, model Rebecca Judd, welcomed their daughter Billie in 2014, making this a celebrity baby name.

Other famous Billies include Broadway and silent film star Billie Burke (real name Mary), who played Glinda the Good in The Wizard of Oz; British pre-war long distance cycling champion Billie Fleming (real name Lilian); American tennis champion Billie Jean King; American country music star Billie Jo Spears; British actress and singer Billie Piper; Australian TV actress Billie Hammerberg; and Australian professional wrestler Billie Kay (born Jessica). Examples of famous men named Billie include Billie Joe Armstrong from the band Green Day and AFL footballer Billie Smedts.

Billie is a retro name only popular in Australia, as there is a local interest in the name. Data shows you are more likely to appreciate the name if you live in Victoria or Tasmania, or in Sydney’s northern suburbs. With Billie, you get a cute and spunky tomboyish name shared with strong and beautiful female namesakes; it’s a casual name that you can take to the beach, but hip enough to dress up nicely in the evenings too. Billie’s day has arrived: the question is, will it keep climbing?

POLL RESULTS
Billie received an approval rating of 46%. 23% of people thought it was only suitable as a nickname, although 22% saw it as strong and spunky. Only one person thought the name Billie seemed smart and classy.

Popular Names in Different Regions for 2015

28 Saturday May 2016

Posted by A.O. in Names in the News

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birth notices, Facebook, popular names

hang-gliding-stanwell-park-view_0NEW SOUTH WALES

Sydney – Northern Beaches
The affluent Northern Beaches published Top 20 lists for individual suburbs – luxury! Names which were higher in the northern suburbs than in NSW overall were Arlo, Harvey, Archie, Beau, Billy, Harley, Theodore, Hugo, Louie, Sonny, Toby, Ashton, Florence, Poppy, Piper, Billie, Millie, Mila, Amelie, Ayla, Savannah, Skye, Jasmine, and Imogen. The overall Top 10:

GIRLS

  1. Charlotte
  2. Grace
  3. Olivia
  4. Emily
  5. Sophia
  6. Chloe
  7. Isabella
  8. Lucy
  9. Sophie
  10. Matilda
BOYS

  1. Oliver
  2. Thomas
  3. William
  4. Jack
  5. Lachlan
  6. Henry
  7. Leo
  8. Benjamin
  9. Max
  10. Ethan

Sydney – Western Suburbs
Most popular names for boys in the west were Jacob, Joshua, William, Noah, James, Muhammad, Hunter and Jackson, while for girls it was Charlotte, Mia, Amelia, Olivia, Sophie, Jessica, Mackenzie, Isabella, Evie, Sienna, Peyton, Tahlia, and Aliza.

The article noted some more unusual names that scored quite highly in the west, such as Zion and Harleen.

Wollongong
The Illawarra region has published a Top 40. Top 40 names include Arlo, Jax and Spencer for boys, and Alyssa, Olive and Ariana for girls. The Top 10:

GIRLS

  1. Charlotte
  2. Ruby
  3. Evie
  4. Mia
  5. Ava
  6. Olivia
  7. Evelyn
  8. Ivy
  9. Ella
  10. Harper
BOYS

  1. Oliver
  2. William
  3. Max
  4. Harrison
  5. Jack
  6. Lachlan
  7. Noah
  8. Levi
  9. Lucas
  10. Elijah

The South Coast
The towns between Berry and Eden published their Top 40 for boys and girls. Arlo, Jasper, Aria and Pippa are Top 40 names on the south coast. The Top 10:

GIRLS

  1. Charlotte
  2. Mia
  3. Ava
  4. Ruby
  5. Olivia
  6. Ivy
  7. Evie
  8. Ella
  9. Chloe
  10. Amelia
BOYS

  1. Oliver
  2. William
  3. Lucas
  4. Jack
  5. Noah
  6. Hunter
  7. Logan
  8. Jackson
  9. Elijah
  10. Max

Wagga Wagga
The most popular names for boys in the Riverina were Oliver, William and Jack, and for girls they were Olivia, Charlotte and Mia.

Broken Hill
The most popular boy’s name was Archie, and the most popular girl’s name was Brooklyn. It intrigues me that Brooklyn not only only sounds like Broken, but has the same meaning – a case of geographic determinism?

Albury and Wodonga
In the border towns, Jack was #1 name for boys, with Archie at #2. The #1 spot for girls was shared between Ava and Sophie, and Ella was #2.

VICTORIA

Ballarat
The #1 name for boys was Jack, followed by Jackson and Thomas. The #1 girl’s name was Olivia, with Ruby and Sophie tying for #2.

On a sad note Mrs Ruth Matthews, who has been recording baby names from The Ballarat Courier for fifty years, has decided to call it a day. So many people are announcing their baby’s birth on Facebook that there been a sharp decline in the number of birth notices. Mrs Matthews said the most popular boy’s name overall was Andrew, and for girls it was Jessica.

Warrnambool
In the south-west of Victoria the most popular names for boys were Angus, William, and Harry, while in second place were Archer/Archie and Jack. For girls, the top names were Lucy and Emma/Emmy, while Charlotte, Ruby, and Mia all came in second place.

The paper noted that Sophie had declined while Fletcher had risen, and that names beginning with H for boys and E for girls were much in evidence.

WESTERN AUSTRALIA

Thanks to Ebony at babynameobsessed for these summaries of regional names from WA.

South West and Great Southern
The most popular boy’s names were Noah at #1, Jack at #2 and Oliver at #3. For girls it was Charlotte #1, Sophie #2, and Amelia, Ava and Matilda at #3.

Jake, Connor, Lincoln, Oscar, Evie, Alexis, Isabelle and Georgia were much higher in the south than in the state overall.

Goldfields and Esperance
Jack was the #1 name for boys, and Olivia # for girls.

Beau, Hudson, Jake, Lincoln, Oscar, Jayden, Max, and Sienna were higher on the Goldfields than in the state overall.

Wheatbelt and Midwest
Jack was the #1 boy’s name, followed by Hudson and James at #2. For girls, Isabelle was #1, with Ella, Sophie, Ava, Matilda, and Mackenzie at #2.

Hudson, Logan, Jaxon, Nathan, Benjamin, Luke, Matthew, Isabelle, Ella, Matilda and Mackenzie were higher in the Wheatbelt region than the state overall.

Kimberley, Pilbara and Gascoyne
In the north of the state, the #1 boy’s name was William, with James at #2 and Samuel, Cooper and Harrison at #3. For girls, Charlotte was #1, Isabella, Amelia and Layla were #2 and Sophia, Isla and Chloe were #3.

Jett, Kevin, Jesse and Cameron were popular names in the state’s north, while Tyler, Luke, Dylan, Archer, Archie, Isabella, Layla and Sophia were higher in popularity than in WA overall.

(Photo shows hang glider over Stanwell Tops in Wollongong, NSW)

Famous Name: Elizabeth

25 Wednesday May 2016

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Biblical names, classic names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, hebrew names, international name popularity, locational names, name history, name meaning, name popularity, nicknames, popular names, royal names, saints names, UK name popularity, US name popularity

parramatta-elizabeth-farm-house

Famous Namesake
Next month marks 226 years since Elizabeth and John Macarthur came to New South Wales on the Second Fleet. From her arrival Elizabeth found herself in a privileged position, for she was the first educated woman to arrive in the colony. Beautiful, tastefully-dressed, charming, witty, articulate, and well-read, she held court among the men of colonial society like a queen. Because of this, she is known as Australia’s First Lady.

When her husband was made Commandment at Parramatta and given land there, he built Elizabeth Farm at Rosehill for them. Originally just a stone cottage, in time the farm became a country estate surrounded by gardens and orchards. While her husband was a politically controversial figure who created chaos and drama wherever he went, Elizabeth transformed their home into an oasis of peace and harmony which even impressed her husband’s numerous enemies.

Elizabeth wrote many letters to family and friends in England, and what strikes the reader is the happiness she managed to create for herself in her new homeland. She loved the climate, and was sensitive to the beauty of the natural landscape, exulting in the way she could grow vegetables, fruit and flowers in rich abundance. She enjoyed the social life of the colony, and with her high spirits and sense of fun, was perennially popular.

After her husband was arrested in 1809 and forced to flee to England, Elizabeth took on the management of John’s extensive merino sheep farm on his estate in Camden, including managing the convict labour force; she is credited with pioneering haymaking in Australia. Elizabeth was a spectacular success in the business, which involved travelling alone through dangerous territory and writing detailed reports for her husband. Together they were a formidable force: John promoting Australian wool in England, while Elizabeth worked hard at producing it.

When her husband returned in 1817, Elizabeth remained important to the Macarthur wool business. Now wealthy and powerful, John built a mansion on the estate in Camden, and descendants of the Macarthurs still live at Camden Park: here also is the Elizabeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute, and nearby Elizabeth Macarthur High School, a selective agricultural high school. Elizabeth Farm, which is one of the oldest colonial dwellings still standing, is now a museum where visitors can move freely and interact with everything on display.

Colonial society was a hotbed of gossip and could be relentlessly critical. Anyone who made the smallest error in appearance or behaviour was mocked and torn down, yet none of this ever touched Elizabeth Macarthur. Contemporaries heap only praise upon her as a devoted wife, perfect mother, accomplished homemaker, and determined businesswoman. She never gossiped, never criticised, and never complained, either of her own workload or the brutality of colonial life.

To the end of her life she remained a lady through and through, combining gentleness and delicacy with a very womanly strength and tenacity. Our First Lady, and our greatest.

Name Information
Elizabeth is from the Greek form of the Hebrew name Elisheba, which can be translated in two ways. One is “God is an oath”, to indicate the power of God’s word – what He swears will be done must come to be. The other is “God is abundance”, to suggest that God always fulfils our needs. Even for a biblical name, Elisheba has a very religious meaning, and in the Old Testament, she is the wife of Aaron, the first High priest, and the mother from whom the priestly caste was born.

The Greek form of the name is used in the Gospel of Luke in the New Testament. Elizabeth was a distant descendant of Aaron, presumably named for her ancestress, and married to Zechariah, who was a priest. The couple had been married for many years and grown old together without ever having the son they longed for.

This is a well-worn plot device in the Bible, so it should come as no surprise that the angel Gabriel brought Zechariah the good news that God had answered their prayers, and Elizabeth was going to have a baby. While pregnant, Elizabeth was visited by a young relative of hers named Mary, from Nazareth, who had received a similar message from Gabriel.

As soon as Mary greeted her, Elizabeth felt the child leap in her womb, and she was moved to hail Mary as “blessed among women” and “the mother of the Lord” (her words used to write the Hail Mary prayer, the basis of Ave Maria). Because of this, she is seen as one of the female prophets.

Elizabeth gave birth to a son, who she named John. He became John the Baptist, the preacher and prophet seen as a forerunner to the ministry of his kinsman Jesus. As a prophet and mother of a prophet, Elizabeth is revered as a saint in Christianity, and given reverence in Islam.

The name Elizabeth has been in use since the Middle Ages, and there are several other saints with the name. The most famous is Elizabeth of Hungary, a 13th century princess famous for her charity. One story told of her is that she was secretly taking bread to the poor when someone demanded to know what she had in her basket. She lifted her cloak, and instead of bread, all that could be seen was a divine vision of roses. This was such a popular act that after this female saints often seemed to cart around miraculous roses as a sign of God’s favour.

Because of the saint’s noble ancestry the name Elizabeth became a favourite among European royalty and aristocracy. It is a traditional name in the British royal family, and Elizabeth I was the last Tudor monarch of England, named after her grandmother Elizabeth of York, the wife of Henry VII. The present queen is Elizabeth II, and she was named after her mother, Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, wife of George VI. Her name was given to the suburb of Elizabeth in Adelaide.

Thanks to its royal associations Elizabeth has remained popular for centuries, and there are many famous namesakes, such as poet Elizabeth Barrett Browning, novelist Elizabeth Gaskell, feminist Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and actress Elizabeth Taylor. In Australia there is the writer Dame Elizabeth Durack, Sister Elizabeth Kenny who saved so many polio patients, pioneer Elizabeth Underwood who founded Ashfield in Sydney, and speedy athlete Elizabeth “Betty” Cuthbert.

In fiction we know witty Elizabeth Bennet from Pride and Prejudice; shy Elizabeth “Beth” March in Little Women; good-girl twin Elizabeth Wakefield in Sweet Valley High; the mysterious Elizabeth (aka Anna) from Bioshock Infinite; spirited beauty Elizabeth Swann from Pirates of the Caribbean; klutzy Elizabeth “Lizzie” McGuire from the TV series; dainty Elizabeth Grayson from L.M. Montgomery’s Anne Shirley books; and Enid Blyton’s “naughtiest girl” Elizabeth Allen.

Elizabeth is a solid classic which has never left the Top 100; it is the only girl’s name to have achieved this distinction. Elizabeth was #13 in the 1900s, and peaked in 1952 at #10, the year that Elizabeth II ascended the throne, and also a year that she toured Australia. Elizabeth is currently #42 nationally, #45 in New South Wales, #50 in Victoria, #49 in Queensland, #42 in Western Australia, and #25 in the Australian Capital Territory.

In the US, Elizabeth has enjoyed even greater popularity and almost never been out of the Top 25 (in 1948 it reached #26). It was continuously in the Top 10 from the 19th century until the mid 1920s, and rejoined the Top 10 in 1980. Since then it has been in the Top 10 or only just outside it, and is now #13.

In the UK, Elizabeth has never been out of the Top 50. It was a Top 10 name from the mid 19th century until the 1930s, and regained its Top 10 spot in the 1950s when Elizabeth II became queen, but left it again by the following decade. It is currently #37. Elizabeth is popular in all English-speaking countries, and most popular in the United States. It is also popular in Mexico and Latin America.

Elizabeth is that rare creature: a true timeless classic. Held by generations of royalty, it is a name of strength, power, and dignity, while also wholesome, honest, and serious. It is as practical as bread and as pretty as roses, and tells us that every word must bear fruit, every promise must be fulfilled.

There isn’t really any other English name that sounds like Elizabeth: it is both distinguished and distinctive. Furthermore, it has a wealth of nicknames, so that every Elizabeth has the chance to be a Lizzie, a Beth, a Libby, a Birdie, an Ellie, an Elsie, or a Betsy (and that’s just for starters). Hail to thee, Elizabeth, mother of many names!

POLL RESULTS

Elizabeth gained an excellent approval rating of 87%, making it one of the highest-rated names of 2016. People saw the name Elizabeth as classy and elegant (23%), versatile because of its many nicknames (19%), strong yet feminine (17%), and intelligent and professional (15%). However 6% of people thought it was too common and boring. Only one person thought the name Elizabeth sounded snobbish.

(Photo shows the verandah at Elizabeth Farm in Parramatta)

The Fastest Rising Top 100 Names of 2015

23 Monday May 2016

Posted by A.O. in Naming Issues

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, international name trends, name trends, popular names

maleficent mark 2GIRLS

Aurora
Aurora joined the Top 100 in 2015 and was the fastest-rising girl’s name in the country, going up at least 23 places to make #78. Aurora was also new to the Top 100 in New South Wales, Victoria, and Queensland, and among the top-rising names in those states. Princess Aurora is the name of the Sleeping Beauty in the animated 1959 Disney film, and the name received fresh attention after the 2014 live-action film Maleficent, a revisionist re-telling; Princess Aurora was played by Elle Fanning. A golden name associated with true love’s kiss, Aurora shares a similar sound with popular Aria. Already popular and rising in New Zealand, the US, Italy, Portugal, Switzerland and Norway, Aurora is rising in the UK.

Billie
Billie was another Top 100 debut last year, gaining at least 19 places to make #82, and joined the Top 100 in New South Wales. It was the fastest rising girl’s name in Victoria, where it was already a Top 100 name. Billie first charted in the 1930s and ’40s, and rejoined the charts in the 1970s. It has been zooming up the charts since 2010, when the hit TV drama series Offspring first screened, with Kat Stewart as straight-talking big sister Billie Proudman. This retro name is only a success story in Australia, so has genuine local appeal.

Penelope
Penelope was one of the fastest-rising names of 2013 when it rejoined the Top 100 that year, and in 2015 it rose 17 places to #62. It was also the fastest-rising girl’s name in Queensland, and among the top rising names in New South Wales, Victoria, and Tasmania. Chosen by a number of celebrities for their babies, this is a name with star power. Also popular in New Zealand and the US, it is rising in Europe and only just outside the Top 100 in the UK.

Piper
Piper has been solidly on the Top 100 since 2008, rising after the witchy TV series Charmed, with Holly-Marie Combs as sensible sis Piper Halliwell. Last year it rose 17 places to #49, joining the Top 50, and was one of the fastest-rising girl’s names in New South Wales. The name was boosted by women’s prison drama Orange is the New Black, starring Taylor Schilling as upmarket drug smuggler Piper Chapman. Already popular and rising in the US and New Zealand, Piper is also rising in the UK.

Eve
Eve was last on the Top 100 in 2013, and after a year away returned in 2015, rising at least 14 places to #87. It rejoined the Top 100 in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory, and was one of the top rising girl’s names in Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory. In 2014 Evelyn was one of the fastest rising names, and it is no surprise that clean, stripped-back Eve has taken its place. Fitting in with short V-sound names like Ava and Ivy, Eve is a natural choice for someone wanting the nickname Evie. Apart from Australia, Eve is only popular in Ireland, Northern Ireland, and Scotland – it’s used to Anglicise the Irish name Aoife, giving it another layer of meaning.

BOYS

Harvey
Harvey debuted in the Top 100 last year, and was one of the top rising names of 2014. In 2015 it did even better, becoming the fastest rising boy’s name in the country, rising 31 places to reach #53, and was one of the fastest rising boy’s names in New South Wales, Queensland, and Tasmania. Harvey benefits both from the fashionable V sound, as in Oliver, and the AR sound found in names such as Archer and Darcy. Harvey also joined the Top 100 in New Zealand last year, and has been popular in the UK for many years.

Theodore
Theodore was another Top 100 debut of 2014, and last year made significant gains, rising 30 places to #66. It was the fastest rising boy’s name in New South Wales, and among the top rising names in Victoria and Tasmania. Among its many attractions are the nicknames Theo and Ted, already gaining in popularity as independent names – Teddy cannot be far behind, and even Bear is a possible nickname. Theodore is also popular and rising in New Zealand, the US, and UK.

Nathaniel
Nathaniel debuted in the Top 100 of 2013, and was one of that year’s fastest rising names. While it fell significantly the following year, Nathaniel has bounced back, rising 20 places to #80, and was one of the top rising boy’s names in new South Wales. This name provides a way to get to popular Nate. A busy namesake for the year was the singer Nathaniel, who released his first album, with the single going platinum and a cover song being chosen as the theme for I’m a Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here! Nathaniel has been popular in the US since the 1970s, and we seem to be catching up just as they prepare to let go of it.

Beau
Beau has been in the Top 100 since the 1980s, so is an old favourite, although it has never become very popular. Nonetheless it had a surprise jump in 2015, going up 19 places to #61, and was the fastest rising boy’s name in Victoria. I had a request to cover the name Beau last year, and I’m impressed by how quickly blog readers tune in to name zeitgeist – Penelope had a huge leap after I was asked to cover it, and now even reliable old Beau has made significant gains. Blog readers know! Beau is only popular in Australia and New Zealand, but is rising in the US.

Carter
Carter debuted in the Top 100 in 2014, and last year went up to 19 places to #79; it was also the fastest rising boy’s name in New South Wales for 2015. Surnames are on trend (and not just for boys – hello Piper!), and Carter has that fashionable AR sound shared with Harvey. Carter is already popular in New Zealand, the US, and Northern Ireland, and rising fast in the UK.

POLL RESULTS

The public’s favourite fastest-rising names of 2015 were Eve and Theodore, and their least favourites were Piper and Carter.

 

The Top 100 Names in Australia for 2015 (Combined Spellings)

22 Sunday May 2016

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

name trends, popular names

GIRLS

  1. Charlotte (1737)
  2. Olivia (1670)
  3. Amelia (1441)
  4. Ava (1434)
  5. Mia (1387)
  6. Sophia (1298)
  7. Chloe (1214)
  8. Emily (1187)
  9. Sophie (1150)
  10. Grace (1122)
  11. Lily/Lilly (1066)
  12. Ella (1059)
  13. Ruby (1042)
  14. Isla (1027)
  15. Isabella (1025)
  16. Evie (989)
  17. Zoe (977)
  18. Matilda (955)
  19. Harper (910)
  20. Ivy (904)
  21. Scarlett (904)
  22. Maddison.Madison (852)
  23. Sienna (831)
  24. Evelyn (790)
  25. Isabelle (772)
  26. Lucy (756)
  27. Emma (748)
  28. Georgia (707)
  29. Hannah (685)
  30. Willow (675)
  31. Zara (655)
  32. Eva (643)
  33. Abigail (589)
  34. Aria (575)
  35. Layla (573)
  36. Mila/Milla (572)
  37. Alice (496)
  38. Imogen (473)
  39. Violet (468)
  40. Audrey (461)
  41. Annabelle (459)
  42. Jasmine (445)
  43. Ellie (417)
  44. Alexis (414)
  45. Summer (413)
  46. Mackenzie (412)
  47. Savannah (408)
  48. Stella (400)
  49. Piper (383)
  50. Sarah (374)
  51. Elizabeth (373)
  52. Maya (370)
  53. Madeleine/Madeline (355)
  54. Jessica (346)
  55. Phoebe (329)
  56. Indiana (311)
  57. Holly (309)
  58. Anna (298)
  59. Lola (294)
  60. Addison (293)
  61. Paige (293)
  62. Penelope (293)
  63. Poppy (290)
  64. Chelsea (284)
  65. Alyssa (277)
  66. Claire (274)
  67. Ariana (259)
  68. Frankie (254)
  69. Eden (251)
  70. Ayla (250)
  71. Eleanor (240)
  72. Charlie (237)
  73. Eloise (227)
  74. Elsie (227)
  75. Harriet (226)
  76. Rose (223)
  77. Bella (221)
  78. Aurora (220)
  79. Molly (215)
  80. Eliza (203)
  81. Victoria (201)
  82. Billie (199)
  83. Hazel (179)
  84. Alexandra (152)
  85. Lara (151)
  86. Lillian (150)
  87. Eve (147)
  88. Daisy (144)
  89. Olive (144)
  90. Emilia (143)
  91. Aisha (140)
  92. Heidi (140)
  93. Aaliyah (126)
  94. Hayley (120)
  95. Peyton (91)
  96. Leah (85)
  97. Gabriella (79)
  98. Maryam (76)
  99. Sadie (72)
  100. Maggie (61)
BOYS

  1. Oliver (2283)
  2. William (1862)
  3. Jack (1802)
  4. Noah (1484)
  5. Thomas (1404)
  6. James (1334)
  7. Jackson/Jaxon (1257)
  8. Ethan (1247)
  9. Lucas (1243)
  10. Lachlan (1084)
  11. Liam (1076)
  12. Charlie (1075)
  13. Henry (1062)
  14. Mason (1058)
  15. Alexander (1049)
  16. Harrison (1048)
  17. Samuel (1008)
  18. Max (1000)
  19. Cooper (979)
  20. Isaac (956)
  21. Jacob (919)
  22. Levi (914)
  23. Benjamin (912)
  24. Leo (902)
  25. Joshua (897)
  26. Oscar (882)
  27. Hudson (879)
  28. Hunter (879)
  29. Harry (835)
  30. Ryan (821)
  31. Xavier (821)
  32. Archie (778)
  33. Elijah (739)
  34. Logan (712)
  35. Riley (712)
  36. George (696)
  37. Sebastian (673)
  38. Daniel (671)
  39. Archer (670)
  40. Patrick (617)
  41. Tyler (604)
  42. Nate (597)
  43. Jayden (572)
  44. Eli (558)
  45. Flynn (547)
  46. Lincoln (532)
  47. Michael (510)
  48. Edward (508)
  49. Luca (504)
  50. Hugo (502)
  51. Connor (495)
  52. Aiden (491)
  53. Harvey (490)
  54. Finn (485)
  55. Jake (477)
  56. Matthew (471)
  57. Luke (440)
  58. Blake (434)
  59. Dylan (429)
  60. Joseph (411)
  61. Beau (409)
  62. Austin (406)
  63. Ashton (400)
  64. Angus (395)
  65. Chase (387)
  66. Theodore (384)
  67. Jordan (383)
  68. Zachary (380)
  69. Kai (373)
  70. Hamish (367)
  71. Nicholas (342)
  72. Nathan (336)
  73. Louis (333)
  74. Ryder (313)
  75. Adam (293)
  76. Charles (290)
  77. Owen (278)
  78. Hayden (276)
  79. Carter (272)
  80. Nathaniel (267)
  81. Jasper (258)
  82. Maxwell (253)
  83. Braxton (243)
  84. Christian (240)
  85. Dominic (229)
  86. Gabriel (217)
  87. Caleb (209)
  88. Muhammad (204)
  89. Toby (196)
  90. Felix (195)
  91. Marcus (188)
  92. Spencer (186)
  93. Ali (185)
  94. Jesse (172)
  95. Arlo (171)
  96. Harley (170)
  97. Darcy (168)
  98. Jett (165)
  99. Fletcher (162)
  100. Lewis (156)

GIRLS

Biggest Rises
Aurora (+23 at least), Billie (+19 at least), Penelope and Piper (+17), Eve (+14 at least), Daisy (+13 at least), Eleanor (+13), Aisha (+10 at least), Frankie and Mackenzie (+10)

Biggest Falls
Hayley (-25), Bella (-20), Poppy (-15), Olive (-13), Lexi (-11 at least), Jade (-10 at least), Aaliyah (-10)

New
Aurora, Billie, Eve, Daisy, Aisha, Leah, Gabriella, Maryam, Maggie

Gone
Lexi, Jade, Indie, Pippa, Amelie, Amber, Elise, Natalie, Lacey

BOYS

Biggest Rises
Harvey (+31), Theodore (+30), Nathaniel (+20), Beau (+19), Carter (+19), Maxwell (+15), Hugo (+13), Luca (+10)

Biggest Falls
Bailey (-25 at least), Caleb (-20), Mitchell (-18 at least), Toby (-14), Blake (-13), Jordan (-13), Zachary (-13), Hayden (-12), David (-10 at least)

New
Spencer, Jesse, Arlo, Harley, Darcy, Jett, Lewis

Gone
Bailey, Mitchell, David, Aaron, John, Phoenix, Anthony

Famous Name: Georgia

11 Wednesday May 2016

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, famous namesakes, Greek names, international name popularity, modern classics, name history, name meaning, name popularity, names from songs, names of countries, names of US states, nicknames, popular names, saints names, stage names, UK name popularity, US name popularity

0905_GeorgiaLee-cropped_800

Famous Namesake
The blog will look at a few musical names in May, and this week the focus is on jazz singer Georgia Lee. She was born Dulcie Pitt in Cairns, and her ancestry was an exotic blend of Jamaican, Indian, Australian Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander, and Scottish. She and her sisters Sophie and Heather formed The Harmony Sisters, and they toured Queensland to entertain the troops during World War II, meeting other performers such as Hollywood star John Wayne.

After the war she took the stage name Georgia Lee and became a cabaret singer in the jazz and blues clubs of 1950s Sydney and Melbourne. She was part of the bohemian world that included famous artists like Donald Friend, Margaret Olley, and Russell Drysdale, and together with Indigenous opera star Harold Blair, took part in the first Moomba Festival in Melbourne in 1951.

Georgia made her mark overseas when she went to London to sing in the West End, which was recorded on BBC radio. Homesickness cut short her international career, but back in Australia she toured with Nat “King” Cole, and appeared on popular TV shows such as Graham Kennedy’s In Melbourne Tonight and Bandstand.

She apparently suffered some sort of nervous breakdown in the late 1950s, but recovered enough to record her 1962 album Georgia Lee Sings the Blues Down Under, which was done all in one take. This was the first album ever recorded by someone with Indigenous Australian ancestry, and was also the first album in Australia recorded in stereo. The album was reissued in 2009, a year before Georgia’s death.

Georgia Lee was our Queen of Jazz, with a distinctly Australian identity and style. She was also a trailblazer for other Indigenous performers. Interviewed in her late seventies she said, “I had a fantastic life and met so many wonderful people”.

Name Information
Georgia is a feminine form of George, a name of Greek origin meaning “farmer”, which became well known because of the dragon-slaying St George. There is a St Georgia as well, a 6th century French nun, who doesn’t get nearly as much publicity, due to the paucity of dragons in her area.

As with its masculine counterpart, the name Georgia was rarely used in Britain until the 18th century, when the Hanoverian dynasty gained the throne; before this, the name Georgia was better known on the Continent, from the Italian Giorgia. However, an early British example is said to be a god child of Anne of Denmark, the wife of James I.

King George II gave his name to the American state of Georgia, which was first administered as a British colony. The name became more popular in the United States, and was a particular favourite in the south. A famous Georgia from Georgia was Georgia Brown, the daughter of politician Dr George Brown, who named her after their home state (although surely after himself too). Her story is said to have inspired the jazz standard Sweet Georgia Brown, whose lyrics explain that Georgia named her, Georgia claimed her.

Another geographical namesake is the country Georgia, once part of the Russian Empire. The origin of its name is not certain: it may be after St George, or from the Greek for “tiller of the soil”, as ancient Greeks called agricultural tribes Georgi. Another theory is that it comes from the Persian word gurg, meaning “wolf”, to indicate “land of wolves”. Its possible all these theories are true, with the different origins conflated.

The name Georgia first entered the charts in the 1940s, debuting at #442. A famous namesake for the era was American singer Georgia Carroll, who was part of the Big Band sound of the 1940s. Previously a model, the attractive songstress was known as “Gorgeous Georgia”. Another was the American artist Georgia O’Keefe, whose reputation grew substantially during the 1940s.

The name Georgia began increasing in popularity in the 1960s, making #228. This was the decade that Ray Charles released his hit version of the song Georgia on My Mind, which was written about the American state Georgia, although the lyrics are ambiguously written so that a girl can also be pictured. The composer Hoagy Carmichael did know a girl named Georgia – his sister – although he said that was a coincidence.

Georgia joined the Top 100 in 1989 at #98. It quickly leaped into the Top 50, making #42 by 1991, and was in the Top 10 by 1996, and the Top 5 by 1997. It peaked at #3 in 2001. It is currently #26 nationally, #25 in New South Wales, #26 in Victoria, #23 in Queensland, #31 in South Australia, #24 in Western Australia, #85 in Tasmania, and #21 in the Australian Capital Territory.

In the UK, Georgia’s popularity has been similar to that in Australia. It was a Top 100 name by the 1990s, peaking at #10 in 1997, and is now #48. Georgia is also popular in New Zealand, Ireland, Northern Ireland, and Scotland. In the US, Georgia has never left the Top 1000. It was popular in the 19th and early 20th centuries, but got as low as the 700s in 1990. It has been generally trending upward since then, and is now #230, so Georgia’s popularity has been quite different there.

The variant Jorja made the Top 100 in both Australia and New Zealand during the early to mid 2000s. It has never been popular in any other country, and in the US only made the Top 1000 once, in 2006 when it was #976 (the year after heavy metal singer Bret Michaels welcomed a daughter named Jorja). This is a common variant spelling of Georgia in Australia, which I suspect parents think will be more intuitive to pronounce, and be free of geographical associations. Like other spelling variants, it’s generally frowned upon by those who furrow their brows over names.

Georgia is a modern classic which has been Top 100 for almost thirty years, and is now very stable in the Top 30. It peaked higher in Australia than anywhere else, and has become one of our popular standards. Georgie is the usual nickname, but Gigi is now more fashionable. If this sweet peach of a name that’s been celebrated in dozens of songs has been on your mind, then you might keep going back to Georgia.

POLL RESULTS

The name Georgia received an approval rating of 79%, making it one of the highest-rated names of 2016. People saw the name Georgia as pretty or beautiful (17%), suitable for all ages (17%), warm and sunny (16%), and sweet and spunky (15%). However 9% thought it was too common and boring. Only one person thought the name Georgia had too many spelling and pronunciation issues.

(Photo of Georgia Lee from ABC radio)

The Top 50 Names from Baby Center Australia for 2015 (Combined Spellings)

28 Thursday Apr 2016

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on The Top 50 Names from Baby Center Australia for 2015 (Combined Spellings)

Tags

Baby Center Australia, name trends, popular names

GIRLS

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

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

GIRLS

Fastest Risers
Mila (+23), Ivy (+22), Evie (+18)

Fastest Fallers
Mackenzie (-18), Abigail (-16)

New
Georgia, Savannah, Poppy, Piper, Madeline, Hayley, Eleanor

BOYS

Fastest Risers
Oscar, Levi and Finn (+13)

Fastest Fallers
Samuel (-21), Henry (-18)

New
Connor, Harvey, Hugo, Daniel, Patrick, Kai

Note: Baby Center Australia counts births reported by parents on its site.

The Top 50 Names in Australia from Kidspot for 2015

26 Tuesday Apr 2016

Posted by A.O. in Name Data

≈ Comments Off on The Top 50 Names in Australia from Kidspot for 2015

Tags

Kidspot, popular names

GIRLS

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

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

GIRLS

Fastest Rising
Elizabeth (+9 at least), Evelyn and Stella (+9)

Fastest Falling
Jasmine (-15 at least), Alexis (-13 at least), Sienna (-7)

New
Elizabeth, Mackenzie, Piper, Sarah

Gone
Jasmine, Alexis, Madison, Poppy

BOYS

Fastest Risers
Hugo (+9 at least), George and Leo (+8)

Fastest Fallers
Jackson (-10), Jaxon (-9), Patrick (-7)

New
Hugo, Michael, Connor

Gone
Blake, Eli

Note: Kidspot compiles data from the state and territory birth registries, except the ACT and Tasmania, who did not provide data.

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