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Waltzing More Than Matilda

Tag Archives: sibsets

What Do You Think of Arrow as a Baby Name?

01 Saturday Nov 2014

Posted by A.O. in Naming Assistance

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Biblical names, celebrity baby names, choosing baby names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, historical records, locational names, middle names, name history, names from television, rare names, sibsets, vocabulary names

Arrow-Flying-Through-Air

Courtney and Joel are expecting a baby next month, and although they have agreed on a girl’s name together, are having more difficulty deciding on a name for a boy.

Courtney thinks of her name as “typically 1980s”, and has often had to share her name with someone in her classroom or workplace, so she likes the idea of her child having something a bit more unusual so they can have their name to themselves. However, Joel thinks that unusual names can be a burden for a child, and would prefer something reasonably common.

Meaning is extremely important to Courtney, and she wants the name to be relevant to their lives: they already have a son named Israel, which has a strong meaning, and reflects their faith.

Should they have another boy, Courtney’s choice for their son’s name is Arrow. She likes that it’s a unique name, and has connotations of strength; there are several Bible verses she likes about arrows, so that it would seem to be another name with a religious meaning. Joel worries that Arrow is just too different.

Courtney wants to know if Arrow is too unusual, and whether people think Israel and Arrow would work as a brotherly sibset?

* * * * * * * * * *

It’s the age old debate on baby names – should our children’s names make them stand out, or fit in? Most of us want something in the middle, and agonise over finding a name that manages to both stand out and fit in simultaneously.

And of course everyone has their own opinion on what makes a baby name “too unusual”. Some people think even Top 100 names are a little out there, while others think almost any name they’ve ever seen on a real person is “too common”.

Although you say that you and Joel are at odds when it comes to unusual names, it seems to me Joel must be fairly open-minded. You have a son named Israel, and that is not a common name in Australia – although it’s not unheard of, and famous people like Israel Folau give it plenty of publicity, I estimate there would be less than six Israels born in any state per year. That’s quite a low amount.

Perhaps Joel liked Israel because it’s a name from the Bible, with a history of many thousands of years, so that everyone has heard of Israel, even if they don’t know anyone with the name. Maybe it hit a sweet spot, so that Israel was neither too common for you, nor too strange for Joel.

Arrow is even less common than Israel, but it’s not unheard of as a baby name. I have seen a few children named Arrow, and it’s getting some use as a middle name – including Bobby Arrow, the son of radio host Tim Ross. The name does have some history, being used since the 18th century, and can be found in Australian historical records from the 19th century, although mostly as a middle name – there are only a couple of people with the first name Arrow.

To me, a name that is very rare is not necessarily a “weird” name. A couple of weeks ago, a blog reader named Michelle asked about two rare girls’ names her partner was keen on, Maida and Maeva. I have seen even less children with these names than those called Arrow (in fact, I’ve seen exactly zero babies named Maida or Maeva), but they fit in really well with current trends in girls names, and would not seem strange amongst classmates named Maeve, Mia, Maya, and Mae.

That’s a good way to get a baby name that’s both uncommon but not too strange – find one that is in rare use, but fits in with contemporary name trends. It may get attention for being out of the ordinary, but hopefully most people will find it refreshing rather than confronting. Could Arrow be one of those rare-yet-on-trend names?

I think Arrow fits in with the trends rather well. From the bounding popularity of Archer, and solid performance of Fletcher (maybe even Beau, which sounds like Bow), it would seem that names connected with archery are on the rise. Furthermore names connected with weaponry in general are doing extremely well, because I regularly see boys (and occasionally girls) with names like Hunter, Gunner, Colt, Blade, Gauge, Bowie, Sabre, and Steele.

I’m a bit skittish about the trend for “weapons as baby names”, but Arrow seems much more than just a weapon. It’s connected to tales of derring-do, like Robin Hood and William Tell, and romance, because of Cupid’s arrows of love. It’s also a superhero name because of the Green Arrow – another hot baby name trend, and in the public consciousness because of the television series, Arrow.

And you are drawn to Arrow for reasons of faith, because arrows are mentioned in the Bible, where it describes “the Lord’s arrow of victory”, which “will flash like lightning”. In the Bible, arrows often symbolise the judgement of God. Arrows also symbolise having a clear direction to follow, swiftness and protection, and also mental alertness and toughness.

The name Arrow is on trend because of its sound too – names starting with Ar- are very fashionable, as witnessed by Archer, Ari, Ariel, Aria, Ariana, Aryan, Arthur, and Arlo. Names ending with an O sound are fashionable too, like Hugo, Indigo, Django, Marlowe, and Arlo again. Arrow doesn’t sound that much different to Arlo, when you think about it.

One of the reasons that makes simple English vocabulary names easy to bear is that everyone knows how to spell and pronounce them; unless you fiddle around with the spelling, there’s no headache involved. People might be surprised by the name Arrow, but there’s no cumbersome explanations necessary.

I think Israel and Arrow work really well as brothers. They’re both unusual names that are still very familiar, at least as a nation and a noun. They’re strong and meaningful, and Arrow really takes Israel is an interesting direction, while Israel possibly makes it clearer that Arrow has been chosen for biblical reasons.

So to me Arrow is not too strange as a name, and I briefly mentioned it on the blog as a name which seemed as if it had a lot of potential. But what about Joel – could Arrow ever hit his sweet spot the way that Israel did?

UPDATE: The baby’s name was Gabriel!

POLL RESULTS
84% of people polled believed that Arrow wasn’t too unusual a name to use on a baby. 34% thought it was a bit unusual, but people would soon get used to it, while 19% admitted the name was too unusual for them to use, but that they would find it interesting on someone else’s child. 10% thought it was a very unusual name, but they considered that positive, as it made the name cool and different, and another 10% didn’t think it was really that unusual, as it fitted in so well with current name trends. 11% didn’t think Arrow was unusual in the least. 10% thought that Arrow probably was too unusual, as they couldn’t imagine it on a real person, while 6% thought it was a really weird name.

81% of people polled were in favour of Israel and Arrow as a sibset. 37% thought it was okay, 26% thought it was a good choice that worked well, while 18% saw it as a perfect match. 14% thought it wasn’t so good, and might need a rethink, while 5% considered it a complete mismatch.

Raven and Tiger

31 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

 

raven 20th oct

Girls
Adelin Jean
Alicia Janet
Anthea Elizabeth Amelia
Arlo Grace
Ava Beatrice (Bailey, Tyler, Archer)
Cara Eloise
Edith Ruby
Esther Renae
Farrah Willow
Freya Cecelia
Georgia Rose (Cadence)
Isabelle Aurelia
Jasmine Leslie (Amelia)
Lucy-Jean Alexandra (Gillian, Max)
Maeve Joan
Marley Cyan (Tyler)
Memphis Amber (Dyllan, Noah, Sophie)
Mia Isabelle (Tasmyn, Jessamine)
Penelope Clare (Daisy)
Raven Morgan (Wyatt, Tully)
Sienna Dakota
Stella Mei Feng (Alexander)
Torah Anne (Emma, Jaidyn, Liam)
Violet Estelle Joy (Sophie, Jax)
Willow Sylvia

Boys
Airley Stan Bentley (Amelia)
Alexander Hope Scott (Makye, Joshua)
Alfred Graham “Freddie”
Archie Buster (Sophie, Vida, Asha)
Bede Jim Godwin (Flynn, Henry)
Bryley Glenn
Cletus
Dueke John (Zoe, Wilson)
Eden (Nova)
George Anthony Gibson
Hamish William (Angus)
Henry Friedrich (Liam)
Hunter Knox (Gunner)
Ira Theodore “Iraklis”
Jack Valentine (Caleb, Charlotte)
Jasper Finley (Sydney)
Jessie Allan Roy
Kendall Jack
Kobe Patrick (Nash)
Luca Jay (Raff)
Maksimir Anton (Mia)
Poson
Riley Norman
Taylen Quinn (Nikiah, Levi)
Tiger Otis (Clover Arabella, Saffron Autumn)

(Picture shows a raven in Canberra Nature Park; photo from Majura Birds)

Lotus and Lakyn

24 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

Kakadu from a blog

Girls
Abbie Margaret Helen (Ebonnie, Kiel, Sean, Tim, Taff)
Alexandra Darinka (Eva)
Agnes Isabel
Aria Moya Ann
Bella Doreen
Clara Rose (Emma, Jordan, Lachlan)
Codi Lee (Mahli)
Dempsey Grace (Patterson, Mackinnon)
Georgina Molly (Lily, Hattie, Ruby)
Haiden Jayne Kean
Imogen Maeve (Amelia)
Isla Kate Dianne (Matilda)
Jovie
Kitt Amanda (Tess)
Lila Roslyn (Leo, Fletcher)
Lottie Catherine (Alexis, Phoebe, Jett)
Lotus Lyn (Nemi, Zeke, Sierra)
Lucy Sibella
Matilda Victoria Joan (Arabella, Freddie)
Mia Natasa (Ana)
Niamh Emily
Penelope May
Sally Louise (Jamie)
Sienna-Beth
Violet Mary

Boys
Alastair George (Charlie, Madeleine, Sullivan)
Antonio José Rino
Arlo Vaiden (Zahli, Kael)
Benjamin Rex (Sam)
Bo Patrick (Ty)
Brae Ranginui
Brodie Clinton (Dayne)
CJ
Fletcher Jack Naman
Freddie (Billy)
James Stuart Stanley (Chanelle)
Jonty Kenrick
Jye Benjamin
Karter River
Lakyn Reid
Malakai Walter
Marco Nicholas (Gabriella, Luca)
Monty John
Orlando Anthony-James (Alessio)
Paxton Jedd (Zara)
Rylan Andrew (Claire, Amelie)
Seth Maxwell
Simba
Tex William
Thomas Pasquale (Isla, Charli)

(Picture shows a lotus flower in Kakadu National Park, in the Northern Territory; photo from The Tent, the Trailer, the Caravan)

You Asked About … The Weekly Birth Announcements

19 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by A.O. in Your Questions Answered

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Baby Name Pondering, Babynameobsessed, birth notices, Bonds Baby Search, British Baby Names, Clare's Name News, Facebook, For Real Baby Names, middle names, name combinations, sibsets, The Art of Naming, twin sets, Twitter, unisex names

woman-reading-newspaper

I’ve been publishing the Birth Announcements category every Friday for almost three years now, and by now I’ve received quite a few questions about them. Here’s the answers to them, plus the answers to questions you haven’t asked, but you might have wondered.

Why do you publish the Birth Announcements?
I read birth notices for my own interest every week, and have done so for several years. Like any collector, I felt like sharing my finds.

What benefits do you imagine other people would receive from reading the Birth Announcements?
Australia doesn’t have much name data past the Top 100, so it’s a way to show the variety of baby names being used by real people, right now. And there’s no data on middle names at all. People might also see names, or name combinations, they admire and consider using themselves. Or they might just be interested generally.

Where do you get the names from?
The bulk of them are from birth notices in newspapers – I read 22 different newspapers for the birth notices, many of them from regional areas. Brooke from Baby Name Pondering contributes names from the Herald Sun, so that’s 23 papers. I also scan hospital announcements – many newspapers publish photographs of babies born in their local hospital that week or month. There’s also baby competitions, such as Bonds Baby Search, stories about new babies in newspapers and magazines, parenting and photography blogs, and even a few babies that readers have seen in real life.

How do you choose the names – do you just pick your favourite names each week?
No, I definitely don’t just pick names that I really like; that would be very boring and repetitive (not to mention a fairly short list). I try to get a good variety of names, and although there’s no set way of choosing names, I generally look out for:

* unusual, rare, and unique names (especially ones that are new to me)
* daring and darling middle names
* popular names matched with eye-catching middles
* names I have featured on the blog (especially the more unusual ones, to show people do use them)
* interesting and appealing twin sets and multiples
* sibsets that seem well-matched, or strangely-matched
* intriguing sibling names (if a name seems ho-hum, check its brother or sister …)
* names from a diversity of cultures (even if that isn’t always obvious from the name)
* unisex names for both genders
* names that aren’t popular, but are on trend
* hip and fashionable names
* names that show up again and again, as a heads-up how well-used they are
* names that are particularly Australian, especially patriotic ones
* names that somehow seem very typical of their time and place
* name combinations that I think will be crowd-pleasers and appeal to other people
* potentially controversial names that I think will get a strong reaction from other people
* and yes – my own personal favourites!

How do you choose the headline names?
I generally look for two names which seem to go together in some way, usually that are in a similar style (like Odette and Raphaelle), or have a connecting theme (like Elvis and Memphis). Names which can easily be matched with a picture are favourites of mine, hence the amount of vocabulary names like Rose, River, Robin, and Rain.

How do you choose the profile pictures?
It’s varied over time. At the moment, I try to find a picture suggested by the headline names in some way, and if that isn’t possible, I might choose one related to the season (like a snowman for winter), or look for ones of children and young people that somehow remind me of the names. For example, last Friday the names were Brinley and Saige, who I could imagine as surfers.

Is it hard to find enough interesting names each week?
No, I usually have too many names, and have to hold some over for the following week. It can be hard to find an equal number of boy and girl names – some weeks it feels as if all the boys have really cool names, and all the girls are named Charlotte Anne and Emily Louise, and then the next week it will be the girls with exciting names, and the boys all called William Thomas and Lachlan James. But I figure that helps give a chance for the more “normal” names to shine.

Any other difficulties?
It can be hard to make sure the names that week aren’t too much alike. Girls names especially seem to be very similar to each other, so that I will have a Mae, a Maeve, a Maya, a Mia, and a Mila all in one week, not to mention six names with Grace as the middle name. In these cases, I will also hold names over for another week.

Are you getting bored with doing this?
Nope.

Shouldn’t you publish all the names you see in a week, instead of filtering them for us?
Hm, interesting suggestion. To me it seems as if 100+ names will just blend in with one another, but my final Birth Announcement for the year will have all the names from  that week, so you can see what it would look like.

Do you publish any of the names so that people can make fun of them?
Definitely not, and I’d be disappointed if people used them as an opportunity to be mean: these aren’t Hollywood celebrities; they’re basically our friends and neighbours. I deliberately don’t tend to choose names that are often targets of name bullying, such as common names with outrageous spellings (apart from anything else, I don’t find them interesting). Having said that, I can never resist a name or name combination which strikes me as comical; I love them.

I don’t remember publishing my child’s name on the Internet – where did you see it?
I don’t make a note of where I see every name, but I will do my best to track it down for you.

You spelled my child’s name incorrectly!
I am but human. Let me know, and I will edit the post.

I don’t want my child’s name published on your blog
Oh dear. Are you sure? It will make me very sad, but I can remove it.

Are you stalking me, or my children?
No, really I’m not. Look at all the newspapers and blogs I have to read – I don’t have time to stalk individual families for their names. I know it looks suspicious that half the kids from your mother’s group were in one set of announcements, or your daughter’s name was in a set of announcements with your kids’s school as the profile picture for it, or your first child’s name was published 18 months ago, and now I just published your second child’s name as well. It’s just that it’s a small world, and you go to a hip mother’s group, and you live in a small town with not many photo opportunities, and you have great taste so both your kids ended up on the blog. I promise these are all by chance, and not by design.

I saw a fantastic name in the Birth Announcements and used it for my baby!
Yay!

What happens if I see a name or a sibset that I think is the bee’s knees?
Leave a comment to that effect (either on the blog itself, Twitter or Facebook), and eventually they will get voted on so we can see which names everyone likes the most.

Aren’t the name polls just a popularity contest?
Like most things in life, yes. I wouldn’t take it too seriously – we’re not voting on the Nobel Prizes here.

Don’t you think there’s too many names to vote on for most of the polls?
Yes. Next year there will be a monthly poll, which hopefully will make them more manageable. In the beginning, I worried not enough people would nominate names, but due to Sarah’s example at For Real Baby Names, I’m now confident enough to nominate names myself if nobody else bothers.

I have developed an addiction to birth notices, and your weekly round up is no longer enough for me – I need more birth announcements!
Completely understandable. Ebony at Babynameobsessed publishes birth notices from Western Australia, then there’s Elea at British Baby Names, who has weekly birth notices from the UK, plus historical birth notices from The Times. Kara at The Art of Naming has birth notices, I think from her local area, and Clare’s Name News provides links to several European blogs that have birth notices from non-English speaking countries. Then of course there’s the motherlode – For Real Baby Names, where Sarah posts names from birth notices several times a week. Plenty of places to get your fix!

Brinley and Saige

17 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

r0_0_1889_1063_w1200_h678_fmax

Girls
Amaya Jean
Amber Kate
Charlotte Oliana
Eloise Wynne (Seb)
Florence Maggie (Sonny)
Genevieve Claire (Olivia)
Heidi Rose Daniela (Ashlynn)
Ida Myrtle
Indiana Skye
Jerusha (Jared, Brianna, Martin, Abisjah, Hannah, Elisheba, Sarah, Archer, Caleb)
Joscelyn May (Sophia)
June (Pearl, Edie)
Keira Elizabeth (Riley, Savannah, Caelan, Diesel)
Larissa Jane
Lola Remy (Macey, Isabella, Elka)
Lucy Estelle (Brittney)
Maya Ellen (Aidan, Tate, Taylah, Logan)
Molly Susannah (Amy, Jennifer, Sam, Paul, Elizabeth)
Olivia Joan Gladys (George, Hugh)
Poppy Adelaide (Flynn, Connor, Max)
Samantha Cornelia
Shyla Lee (Rheanna, Mikayla, Cayden)
Tiarnah Nevaeh
Winifred Margaret “Winnie” (Daisy)
Zara Sage (Harry)

Boys
Alvaro Shane
Asher Clancy (Curtis, Matilda)
Astyn Terrence (Alyvia, Ethan)
Blake Casella (Harrison, Charlize)
Brinley Mason (Addison, Bailey)
Callum Leonardus Royce (Sydney, Kristina, Connor, Anthony, Nicholas, Vanessa, Melissa)
Dorian John
Drew Edwin William
Edward Sidney “Teddy”
Jagger Jack (Cruz)
James Oliver Spry
Joel Harvey (Katie, Brendan, Kade, Jaycob, Ethan)
Louie Anthony (Joseph, Charlie)
Maddox Riley
Mitchell Alexander (Rawdon)
Nathaniel Reid
Oliver Geoffrey (Roland)
Ryder Owen James (Jacob, Zeke)
Saige Kane (Harmonni, Maddison)
Scott Thomas
Stefan Matthew (Lily)
Theodore Anson
William Harry (Oliver, Edward)
Xavier Pete

(Picture shows boys at the 2014 NRMA NSW Junior Surfing Titles in Port Macquarie; photo from Port Macquarie News)

 

Daisy Darling and Ruby Kiss

10 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, triplet sets, twin sets

perth zoo

Multiples
Cherokee Rose and Imogen May
Phoenix and Loxley – both boys
Vashisth, Anaya and Aditya

Girls
Airley Emma-Lee Skye
Aliika Jane (Xavier)
Anastasia Margaret (Alexandra, Zachary, Samuel)
Arabella Jade (Brayden, Jorja)
Asher Evelynne
Azuma
Daisy Darling
Davina (Kiara Jade)
Delilah Rose
Emmeline Ruth “Emme”
Georgia Grace (Alex, Lachlan, Mitchell)
Gracie Joan (William)
Ivy Bloom
Jasmine Sienna (Jessica)
Kelsey Dayna (Cienna, Dominic)
Lola Judith Mae (Max, Audrey)
Lucia Rosa
Marlowe Daisy (Hunter)
Mietta Eve (Jarvis, Tilly)
Nikita Louise
Olive Clara Hazel
Ruby Kiss
Sapphira
Summer Debbie
Tilly Anne

Boys
Andrew Desmond (Victoria)
Coby Brian
Euan Archie
Floyd-Henry
Hilton George (Freya)
Jack Kingsley
Joe Erik Ross (Rae)
Jonty William (Blake)
Judd Alexander
Levi Jude
Liam Kees (Joel, Bobby)
Lincoln Atlas
Luca Hendrik
Mac Walter
Marcel Francis (Jakobi, Guinevere)
Oscar Harry Rupert (Zeb)
Ricky John (Taylor, Nicola)
Ronan Michael
Ruben Anthony
Tao (Indah)
Taylor Ashley (Bailey)
Ted Arie
Vaughan Thomas (Ava, Esther)
Vincent Matteo (Lily, Linkin, Rocco)
Zailen Tye

(Photo shows native everlasting daisies at Perth Zoo)

Names Spotted at Home and Abroad: Name Story Special (Spring 2014)

08 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by A.O. in Names Spotted at Home and Abroad

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

choosing baby names, famous namesakes, For Real Baby Names, Greek names, honouring, Japanese names, locational names, middle names, mythological names, name combinations, names of businesses, nicknames, popular names, rare names, Shakespearean names, sibsets, street names, surname names, The Best Gift ofLife, unisex names

our-family_10

When I looked through my name files, I saw I had quite a collection of stories explaining how babies had received their names. I thought it would be worthwhile to see how other parents go about choosing baby names, as some of their solutions have been quite creative. (You may remember some of these names from the weekly Birth Announcements).

Footy Fever
Baby Aish Barker of Adelaide was named after a famous footballing family where three generations have played for Norwood Football Club. Dad is a massive Norwood fan, and always knew that this child would be called Aish, a name chosen in advance of the birth, regardless of the baby’s gender. Aish is a girl, and her big sister is Teegan. The Aish family feel honoured to have a baby named after them.

Reality Check
Amity McIntosh was born last Easter in Toowoomba, a sister to Dylan. She is named after Amity Dry, who got her big break after appearing on renovation reality show, The Block, in 2003; she and her husband were the winners that year. Through exposure gained on the show, Amity Dry got a recording contract, and has released two albums, as well as writing a musical play. You might remember that the name Amity has just reached the Top 100 in Queensland, so even though Ms Dry is from Adelaide, her name seems to have been a big hit north of the border.

His Name is History
Ethan Forbes Thomas was born in Sydney last autumn, the great-great-great grandson of William Thomas, the first Lord Mayor of Forbes, in country New South Wales. His parents were originally going to use the name William to honour the family connection, but there were already a lot of Williams in their family. They still wanted a name connected to their revered great-great, so chose the name of the town instead. The Thomas family have a strong connection to their family heritage in Forbes, and planned to have Ethan baptised in Forbes in September. Forbes is a very interesting town historically, as it was a gold-rush town in the 19th century. The bushranger Ben Hall was shot near there, and Ned Kelly‘s sister Kate lived in Forbes: she drowned saving an Aboriginal child during a flood, and is buried in the town’s cemetery.

Gender Swap Baby
Sebastian Carvajal was born on Mother’s Day in Melbourne, and was a “surprise baby”, because his parents were told at their ultrasound scan that their baby was a girl. They had therefore painted the nursery pink, bought girl baby clothes, and picked out the name Olivia, not to mention planning trips to the nail salon and dance classes. I remember reading that parents who opt to find out the sex of their baby in advance tend to have very set ideas about gender roles, and this seems like a good example – pink and dance classes for girls, blue and hobby cars for boys! I was interested that they had Olivia chosen for a girl and Sebastian for a boy, because Olivia and Sebastian are a couple in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night.

Named After Mum’s Cheeks
Rosie Lyn Killalea was born in June in Sydney, and she is named that because her mum’s childhood nickname was Rosie, as she had rosy-red cheeks. Her middle name Lyn is after her great-grandmother, who passed away a year before Rosie was born. Rosie has inherited her mum’s pink cheeks.

Two Grandmothers in One Name
Lana Rosanna Krause was born in Rockhampton in July. Her middle name was chosen because her mother’s mum is named Annette and her father’s mum is named Rose.

Greek Mystery
Aeson Carter Small was born in August in Gladstone, just as his parents returned from holiday. When his parents first decided to start trying for a baby, they discovered that his mother was pregnant just two days later. They picked the name Aeson, because they believed that it was a translation from the Greek for “meant to be”, but I think they must have got it from some dodgy name book, because the meaning of Aeson isn’t known. In Greek myth, Aeson was the father of Jason, and he came to an unfortunate end.

He’s Cruz, Not Acacia
Cruz Zion Petterson, of Sutherland Shire, was born in the car on the way to the hospital. The car was parked on Fauna Place, just off Acacia Road in Sutherland, and some people thought he should have been named Acacia; however the Pettersons didn’t think either Acacia or Fauna were viable options for their son. I wonder if Cruz would have been called Acacia if he was a girl? Cruz wasn’t born in a Holden Cruze, but in a Mitsubishi 380. Cruz has a big sister named Starr and a big brother named Phoenix.

Names From The Best Gift of Life

The Best Gift of Life is a blog that Sarah from For Real Baby Names put me onto. It has interviews with mums, many of whom have interests in fashion, photography, and interior design, about their lives and their babies. One of the interview questions is about how they chose their baby’s name, so I thought I’d share some from Australian families.

Bambi – parents Vanessa and Sean liked the name, and knew she would be the cutest little girl.

Johnny Jay – named after mum Shaunyl’s grandfather, John James. Johnny honours Johnny Cash, one of Shaunyl’s favourite singers.

Kawa Leaf – parents are Dee and Desmond. Kawa means “river” in Japanese. Dee lived in Japan in her early twenties, and the name resonated with her; she is of Chinese heritage, and in Chinese Kawa translates as “family” + “fine painting”. The middle name Leaf was chosen because at the time of Kawa’s conception and during the pregnancy, the family were living in a garden nursery called New Leaf.

Peaches Wilde – parents Tess and Caleb had the name picked out even while they were dating. Peachy was mum’s nickname, so dad thought Peaches was perfect. The middle name Wilde was chosen because dad is a “wild hearted” stuntman, so the name honours both parents.

Ravi and Nova – two brothers born a year apart to Camille and Dean. Ravi‘s name was chosen at the 14 week mark of pregnancy, but Nova‘s took longer as most of their favourite names got “swiped”. Both parents like unusual names, and Camille comes from a family which includes Afrika, Harmony, India, Nimue and Joaquin, so different names blend in better.

Seb – named after the Spanish city of San Sebastian which his parents Karrie-Anne and Brent fell in love with on holiday. They were never going to call him Sebastian, so used the short form, Seb.

(Picture is of Peaches Wilde with her mother Tess; photo from The Best Gift of Life)

Delphine and Cassius

03 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

leaping-dolphins

Girls
Alaska (Kruze, Jax)
Annabel Nerida (Jemima, Edward)
Aurelia Jane Marie
Brooklyn Joan
Cheyenne Larrena (Jack)
Delphine Ivy (Caleb, Arianna, Temperance, Peyton, Jonas, Everleigh)
Emelia Vivien
Erica Alesia
Esther Louise (Isabella, Aoife)
Gabriela Faith (Michaela)
Hallie Rose (Paddy, Mason)
Jemma Rosemary (Ruby)
Lennon Bell
Lucy Eliza (Henry, Grace)
Lola Violet (Ivy)
Maisey Estelle
Matilda Evangeline (Miranda)
Milana Marni Anne (Mick)
Molly Rochelle (Lucy, Meeka)
Nevaeh Te Kapua Hou
Sadie April (Mikayla, Madison)
Sage Michele
Sena
Sibella Rosetta Zina
Spencer Mae

Boys
Addison Rowan (Abbey-Rose, Joseph, Flynn)
Anton Michele (Ariana)
Asher Jack (Freya)
Avery Thomas
Blake Cameron (Rose)
Carlo Vincent (Luca)
Carter Hendrix
Cassius John (Pascal, Rohan, Josie)
Darcy James
Diesel
Elvis Roy
Frederick Robert (Tilly, Lucy, Tom, Clara)
Jasper Edward
Jax Fergus (Ellie)
Jett Clyde (Loghan)
Julian Eric (Caroline)
Mehki Kevin
Millar George
Moses Laurence (Nathan, Noah, Henry, Hannah)
Ned William (Lucy, Alex)
Nelson Felix
Owen David
Taj Justin
Tobias Rylan
Vincent Ramon

Note: Thank you to Brooke from Baby Name Pondering for her contributions from the Herald Sun)

(Photo shows dolphins near Rockingham, Western Australia)

Odette and Raphaelle

26 Friday Sep 2014

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, triplet sets

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Triplets
Esther Beech, Betty Frances and Miles Alban

Girls
Aliyah Jewel (Maya, Aidan, Jai)
Annabelle Violet (Hamish, Daisy, Sunny)
Archer Willow
Aubrey Mabel (Sage)
Brooklyn Ava (Edison, Tahlia)
Emilia Danica
Georgia Quinn
Hasini (Harshil)
Imogen Eloise (Chloe, Emma)
Jamila Judi
Juliette Daisy (William, Charlotte)
Kiara Lee (Charnae)
Liesl May (Connor)
Lillibel Pixie Grace (Sunny, Elke, River)
Lotti Jean
Lucy Rheta (Jackson)
Malaika Nina
Mia Clelia Bani
Millie Eve
Odette Alexandra (Adeline, Everleigh, Tallulah)
Olivia Wynter (Oscar Bear)
Raphaelle Clementine (Wolfe)
Seerat (Sukhmann, Sargi, Japji, Samreen, Justin, Armaan)
Tianna Olivia (Ayla)
Violet Elizabeth

Boys
Arthur Paul
Charles David
Cohen Jack
Corbin Jarvis
Ezekyal Thomas George (Jye, Bailee, Izaiyah, Nahriya, Jhett)
Flynn Ryder (Eve)
Grayson Alistair
Hamish Bevan
Jake Rowan
James Lewis Emmanuel
Jett Ross (Koby)
Johnnie Callan (Indih)
Jordan Gregory
Jude Edward
Kydon Jeffrey
Lachy Leonard (Nate)
Lakyn
Myles Keith
Nash William (Dempsey)
Oliver Charles (Blake)
Samson James
Sebastian Luca
Spencer Luis
Ted Peter
Van John Robert

Thank you to Brooke from Baby Name Pondering for her contributions from the Herald Sun. 

(Picture shows a family of black swans on Lake Spencer in Manchattie Park, Bathurst, in New South Wales; photo from the Mudgee Guardian)

Name Update: They Did a Complete Revamp

25 Thursday Sep 2014

Posted by A.O. in Name Updates

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

choosing baby names, name combinations, sibsets

Vincent-designstyle-colors-m

Ashleigh and Dylan were interested to know if it would be legal to name their baby Duke, and also had several other names on their baby name short list.

However, Ash writes that they spent so long looking over their name list that in the end, none of them seemed right at all. A week before their son was born, they scrapped the list entirely, and started from scratch.

There was a name that Ash had liked for a boy as soon as she found out she was pregnant, but Dylan wasn’t keen. However, when they started their search anew, it was the first name he suggested, as in the intervening time, Dylan started to like the sound of it.

So when their son arrived a couple of weeks ago, his name was

VINCENT COREY “VINNIE“,

little brother to IMOGEN.

I’m so glad Ash and Dylan had the courage to scrap their list and start again – there’s no point sticking with names you no longer like, and much better to change your mind before than have baby name regret after. And isn’t it great that Dylan had a change of heart? It shows that just because your partner says no to a name, it doesn’t always mean that’s their final answer.

Congratulations Ash and Dylan! I think Vincent is really handsome, and makes a great brother for Imogen.

 

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