• About
  • Best Baby Names
  • Celebrity Baby Names
  • Celebrity Baby Names – Current
  • Celebrity Baby Names – Past
  • Featured Boys Names
  • Featured Girls Names
  • Featured Unisex Names
  • Links to Name Data
  • Waltzing on the Web

Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Tag Archives: sibsets

Storm and Steel

28 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, triplet sets, twin sets

r1133789_13994150Multiples

Jye and Kayos – both boys

Namaeya and Hati

Yasmin, Suntaj and Zarine

Girls

Anja Linda

Coco Elizabeth

Della Rose (Lacey)

Dimity Anne

Eleni Mei

Eve Honora (Harry, Elliot)

Josephine Carroll (Quinn, Zara, Raphael)

June Gabriel (Hugo)

Lilah Daphne

Lucinda Anquelique (Charlotte)

Margot Amelia (Thomas, Lily)

Sadie J (Tighe, Jezzy, Arli)

Storm Isabelle Grace

Sybella Rayne (Hunter)

Wynta Rae

Boys

Archer Lemin (Toby)

Archie Kip

Banon Jett (Tate)

Christopher Silvio

Flynn Pascal

Ja Rule

Lennon Jeremiah (Cooper, Gracie)

Lincoln Huon (Flint, Adam, Gus)

Monte TC

Mostyn Kenneth

Novak

Oliver Keefer

Ronan Patrick (Sophia)

Solomon Hunt (Lydia)

Steel Mannix (Duke, Fox)

Most popular names this week

Girls: Amelia

Boys: Mason

(Picture shows a recent storm near Mt Isa in Queensland; photo by Ben McCrae, from ABC North West Queensland)

Verona and Zen

21 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, triplet sets, twin sets

6a00e0097e4e688833011570947df5970c-320wiMultiples

Mila and Justice – both girls

Eliza, Bronte and Chloe (Fraser)

 

Girls

Cadence Ann

Euphemia Isobel

Evelyn Elva (Analise)

Genevieve Anna Grete (Chelsea)

Lottie Estelle (Sage)

Maeve Fallon (Sebastian)

Paisley Kathryn Anne (Hamish)

Quinn Morgan (Paige)

Verona Elle (Evelyn)

Yasmin Kate

 

Boys

Aksel Dahze

Brooker Guy (Ebony, Rene)

Dustin Archer (Jaxon)

Kane Dion (Mia)

Louis Hugh Emil (Henry, Jack)

Paden Ivor (Taj, Bodhi)

Soya James

Spencer Kendall (Sacha)

Travis Arthur

Zen (Jet)

 

Most popular names this week

Girls: Lara

Boys: Charlie

(Picture shows Ballarat, Victoria, in winter; photo from ABC blog, taken by Kirri-Joy)

Heinrich Jaeger and Maximus Steele

14 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, triplet sets, twin sets

Steelworks-defMultiples

Margaret and Elizabeth

Indica, Tywin and Phoenix

 

Girls

Ariana Erminia (Vitalia)

Candice Yiyu

Danica Jenna

Felicity Brooke (Lucy, Rebekah)

Gillian Daisy (Tia)

Harriet Alexandra

Koa Mia (Jaiden)

Lila Goban (Bruce, Ivy)

Marilyn Ivy Jean

Miriam Jayne (Gregor)

Olivia Puti

Poppy Pip Niamh Adelaide (Lily)

Rori Mae

Sylvie Angelica Teresa (Massimo)

Talitha Emma

 

Boys

Colby Darren (Brooke)

Elisha Nate (Phoebe, Holly)

Harley Reef

Heinrich Jaeger “Ricky”

Jakob Jim Rudolf

Jackson Branco

Lucius Jonathan (Jennifer, Nathan, Cody)

Maximus Steele “Max”

Mojtba Gafar Mohamed Abbas

Ned Archer (Jack, Abe)

Orlando John Livio (Arabella)

Oscar Jan

Sebastian Levi (Xavier, Willow)

Soren Jack (Tily, Emmett)

Xavier Gray

 

Most popular names this week

Girls: Isabella, Lucy and Zoe

Boys: Mitchell

(Photo shows the Port Kembla steelworks in Wollongong)

Choosing Between Two Baby Names

09 Sunday Jun 2013

Posted by A.O. in Your Questions Answered

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Baby Name Genie, choosing baby names, honouring, initials, middle names, name popularity, nicknames, popular names, sibsets, US name popularity

k-bigpicA lot of times, parents end up with two front-runners on their baby name list – both equally good choices, both equally loved. They’re usually fairly similar in style and popularity, which makes it harder to decide.

One of the most common questions used to search for the blog is choosing between two different names, so today I thought we would take one of these questions as an example of different ways you could use to make the choice between names. Not all of them will work for you, but hopefully at least one of them will make sense.

The names I’ve chosen are Sophia nn “Sophie” and Matilda nn “Tilly“, which are only four places apart in the 2012 NSW 100. For the purposes of the exercise, I’ve picked the surname Conway out of the phone book, and we will imagine that the middle name has to be Jane, after grandma. The baby’s siblings are named Audrey and William nn “Will“.

Check how each name sounds with the middle name and surname

Take your names on a road test by trying all possible combinations of each name, including nicknames and initials.

Sophia Jane, Sophia Conway, Sophia Jane Conway, Sophie Conway, S Conway, SJ Conway, SJC

OR

Matilda Jane, Matilda Conway, Matilda Jane Conway, Tilly Conway, M Conway, MJ Conway, MJC

Don’t just write them down on a piece of paper, say them aloud. Put them into sentences. Sophie, please set the table for dinner … Tilly, where were you? I was so worried! This road test from Baby Name Genie is quite good.

Call them out – Sophia, are you ready for school? Matilda Jane Conway, get in here this instant! (The usual advice seems to be to do this in a supermarket or playground, but where I live, this will get you called “the crazy woman who yelled at an imaginary person in the supermarket/playground” for the next forty years. Everyone else must have more open-minded supermarkets, or else they drive to another town to do it or something.)

Does one name appeal more than another when you say it out aloud? Do you prefer the smooth sound of Sophia Conway, or the perky lilt of Tilly Conway? Does Matilda Jane seem “right” to you, in a way that Sophia Jane doesn’t? Do the initials MJ bug you for some indefinable reason?

Check how each name sounds with the siblings

Audrey, William and Sophia

OR

Audrey, William and Matilda

Which one can you best imagine as Audrey and William’s baby sister? Can you see yourself saying, These are my children – Audrey, William and Sophia or My kids are called Audrey, Will and Tilly? Do Will and Tilly sound too much alike to your ears?

Popularity

If you care about popularity even a little (and let’s face it, most of us do), have a quick check of each name’s popularity. Not just how popular it is now, but whether it is becoming more or less popular.

Sophia is still climbing in popularity, while Matilda has begun to descend in the charts, although both names are fairly stable – Sophia rose only 1 place last year, while Matilda didn’t move.

While both names have a similar popularity, Sophia is likely to become more popular, and perhaps even reach #1, as it has in the United States. Matilda is unlikely to overtake its peak of #16, but will probably remain fairly popular for some time.

A lot of parents have a great anxiety about their baby’s name becoming “too popular” and reject names on an upward trajectory, but I think names rising in popularity are nothing to be afraid of. For girls especially, having a rising name seems to correlate with liking their own name a great deal.

In this case, they may not have too many years to have a rising name, as Sophia could peak fairly soon. You may want to take the nickname into account and consider the popularity of Sophie too.

In practice, parents are going to be more concerned about local popularity – if they know ten Matildas and no Sophias in their neighbourhood, Sophia is going to be more attractive to them, no matter what the charts say.

As we don’t have crystal balls or the ability to control other parents’ names choices, I think it’s wisest to educate ourselves about popularity, but not to fret over it.

Wait until the baby is born before deciding

This must be the most common piece of advice handed out to indecisive parents, and with good reason: a lot of the time it seems to work. Many parents seem able to instinctively feel that their baby looks like a particular name, and no other can be considered. They look at their daughter, and know at once she is a Matilda, and not a Sophia, and the question is settled.

It doesn’t work for everyone, or for every baby, so I would consider this a technique you would hope to work, rather than expect it to.

Flip a coin

This is another common piece of advice handed out when you need to make a decision. It’s not as silly as it sounds, because the important part is not whether you get heads or tails, but how the outcome makes you feel. In other words, the coin toss is just a way to gauge your gut reaction. You toss a coin, and you get heads, which means the name is Matilda. Do you feel a pang of loss that it isn’t Sophia? Were you secretly hoping it would be tails? Maybe your gut is telling you something.

Choose a third option

If you get all the way through this and you still can’t decide between Sophia and Matilda, chances are neither name is right. Maybe the perfect name has been staring you in the face the whole time, and you’ve been too distracted obsessing over Sophia and Matilda to notice it. Stop obsessing, and the right name might make itself known to you.

Things to consider

  • It’s fine to ask other people for their opinions, but don’t follow them blindly. Asking too many people may end up confusing you more, so it’s best to limit how many people you ask, and choose them wisely. The best people to talk to are those that ask you questions to help you understand your own feelings better, rather than people who just tell you their own opinions, and those who can share their own experiences, so you can learn what techniques worked for other people.
  • If you are hesitating about a name because of the middle name or the nickname, that’s something that might be easily fixed. For example, if Sophie as a nn for Sophia seems too common, you could always use Fia. If you think Tilly sounds odd next to a brother named Will, maybe Tilda or Matti is more pleasing to you (or you might just choose to be glad you didn’t nickname William “Billy”). If you don’t love Sophia Jane, perhaps you could add another middle and call her Sophia Violet Jane instead. Think about whether a particular issue can be changed to suit you better before you cross it off.
  • Trust your instincts. There’s no right or wrong answer, so go with what feels right to you. A name doesn’t have to tick every box to be the right one.
  • Don’t stress over the decision or over-think it. In the grander scheme of things, it doesn’t make a huge difference whether you pick Sophia or Matilda – they are both nice names. Since there isn’t a wrong choice to make, you might as well relax about it!

Have you ever had to choose between two names which both seemed perfect? How did you make a choice?

Name Update: Bugsy Has a Brother!

08 Saturday Jun 2013

Posted by A.O. in Name Updates

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

choosing baby names, honouring, names from movies, nicknames, sibsets, To Kill a Mockingbird, vintage names

jem finchMia wrote in to the blog a couple of months ago, wondering what kind of name would suit a sibling to her son Bugsy, whose name was chosen by his dad, Lachlan.

Mia wrote in again to say that she was considering the name Marlon for the baby if it was a boy. However, she set her heart on a girl’s name which starts with Mar-, so she abandoned the idea of calling her son Marlon.

Mia and Lachlan’s second son was born on May 22 weighing 5 lb 3oz, and at first the name Thatcher (nicknamed Ted) seemed like the right one for him. But somehow Mia was not 100% convinced that he looked like a Thatcher, and when she talked it over with Lachlan, he confessed he didn’t really love the name.

It took a couple more weeks to make the final decision, but now Mia and Lachlan are absolutely sure of his name, and he is called

JEM RICHMOND,

little brother to Bugsy.

Mia and Lachlan like that it is short and nicknamey, easy to spell, and a regular name that won’t be a hassle, while still being just unusual enough to not stand out next to Bugsy. James is an important name on both sides of the family, so they feel that it is honouring the Jameses, although they didn’t set out to do that. Everyone loves Jem’s name, so it’s been a complete success.

Interestingly, Bugsy is a name from a movie (Bugsy Malone), while Jem is also from a movie (Jem Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird), so they seem a very well-matched pair of brothers. They’re both vintage names, and both quite boyishly cute and casual as well.

Another interesting snippet is that when readers were polled on what kind of name would go best with Bugsy, most respondents picked “A name from the 1920s/30s” – To Kill a Mockingbird is set in the 1930s.

Not only is Jem gorgeous, the rise of hip Atticus and Scout make Jem seem like an undiscovered Mockingbird name – I think people will really “get” Jem, and a couple are going to be kicking themselves they didn’t think of it first.

I love the middle name Richmond too – very sleek and handsome. It made its way onto a name list two years ago – oddly enough, it was published May 22. Spooky!

Congratulations Mia and Lachlan for choosing the perfect name for your son, and putting so much love and thought into the choice. Thanks also for showing people it’s okay to have a change of heart about your baby name, even after the baby is born.

(Photo shows Philip Alford as Jem Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird)

Sunday Betty and Leon Morpheus

07 Friday Jun 2013

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

261755-kids-splahshing-in-puddlesmnTwins

Charlotte India and Elise Phillipa

Quinn Ruby and Brooklyn Louise (Logan, Bailee)

 

Girls

Anne Priscilla

Azalea HenniBeth

Bo Harla

Bridget Joyce

Chevota Laura-Anne Rose (Hannah)

Clementine Daisy Patience (Sadie, Spencer)

Coral Lidia (Billy)

Elsie Ruth (Isla)

Ivy Constance

Kirra Paige (Dylan)

La-Toya Zahara

Lola Nell

Mahlia Celeste (Saxon, Jarvis)

Pia Charlotte

Sunday Betty

 

Boys

Angus Lovell

Arlie Francis (Arden, Quinn)

Asher Myles (Halle, Beau, Lewis)

Brax Gabriel (Mace, Cruze)

Darcy Sage

Dorian James

Fletcher Morris (Lucy)

Harley Rossie

Henrik Gilbert (Haakon, Edvin)

Hugo Oiva

Isaiah James Kaima

Leon Morpheus

Max Addison

Naish Peter (Eliza)

Rocklan David (Abigail)

 

Most popular names this week:

Girls: Amelia

Boys: Lachlan

(Picture shows friends India and Frank playing in puddles in Adelaide; photo from The Advertiser)

Waltzing with … Fletcher

02 Sunday Jun 2013

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

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

english names, Errol Flynn, famous namesakes, name combinations, name history, name meaning, name popularity, Old French names, popular names, sibsets, surname names, UK name popularity, US name popularity

Bounty-paintingBounty Day is on June 8th, and this year the festivities will be held on the 10th because it’s a weekend. Bounty Day is a major holiday on Norfolk Island, and celebrates the day that the descendants of the mutineers on the Bounty arrived on the island. The mutiny on the Bounty in 1789 is a tale which has often been told in books, movies, songs and TV shows, yet continues to be a subject of debate, with the relationship between Captain William Bligh and head mutineer Fletcher Christian at its centre.

There has been a tendency to portray Captain Bligh as a cruel tyrant who flogged his men into mutiny, but records show that his rule was generally mild and enlightened. For whatever reason, he and his master’s mate, Fletcher Christian, failed to get along. During the voyage, the ship’s crew enjoyed a lengthy stay on Tahiti, and its relaxed lifestyle seem to have made a return to naval discipline appear intolerable to the men; Bligh’s acid tongue, quick temper and insulting manner probably didn’t help.

Fletcher led the mutiny against Bligh while the ship was near Tonga, and took control of the Bounty, while Bligh and his loyalists were set afloat. The mutineers spent time in Tahiti, where Fletcher married Maimiti, the daughter of a local chief. From there, they kidnapped several of the locals and took them to Pitcairn Island, at that time uninhabited and incorrectly mapped. Once there, they sunk and burned the Bounty so that nobody could leave.

Perhaps they thought they had found an island paradise, but Pitcairn Island became plagued by murder, rape, slavery, alcoholism and insurrection. During one conflict, Fletcher Christian was reportedly killed, leaving behind his pregnant wife and their sons, Thursday October and Charles; his daughter Mary Ann was born after his death. Thursday and Charles are the ancestors of almost everyone with the surname Christian on Pitcairn and Norfolk Island, and the Christians are one of Norfolk Islands first families.

Norfolk Island was once a penal colony, and after the convicts had been repatriated to Tasmania, it was resettled in 1856 by people from Pitcairn Island, whose population (the descendants of mutineers and their Tahitian wives) had grown too large for it. Norfolk Island became part of the Commonwealth of Australia in 1901.

[If you have been worried about Captain Bligh all this time – don’t be. That capable seaman navigated his way to Timor across 3618 nautical miles of sea in 47 days, and made his way back to England, where he reported the mutiny to the Admiralty. Later he was appointed Governor of New South Wales, where he must have rubbed people up the wrong way again, as the Rum Rebellion saw him arrested and imprisoned by the rebels. Once all that mess had been sorted out, he was promoted].

Fletcher is an English surname which is an occupational name for an arrowsmith, someone who makes arrows. The word is derived from the Old French fleche, meaning “arrow”. It takes a great deal of skill to make arrows correctly, and during medieval times, the role of the fletcher became highly respected and well-paid.

The Fletchers trace their descent from Jean de la Fleche, a Norman noble who was granted lands in Yorkshire by William the Conqueror. Jean’s descendant, Sir Bernard Fletcher, moved to Scotland, where he was granted lands by King David I. The Fletchers forged strong relationships with the Campbells, the Stewarts and the McGregors; one of the Fletchers is said to have saved the life of Rob Roy McGregor when he was wounded. The Fletcher line continued their involvement in arrowsmithing for royalty and the nobility for several centuries.

The most famous Australian with the first name Fletcher is probably Sir (David) Fletcher Jones, the son of a Cornish miner who started his own highly successful menswear business in the 1920s. Fletcher Jones is credited with transforming men’s fashion in Australia, which gives this name a conservative, yet stylish, feel.

Fletcher began charting in New South Wales in the 1990s, when it debuted at #365. It peaked in 2009 at #156, and is currently stable at #178. Fletcher is #152 in Victoria, and is significantly more popular in Tasmania, where it is in the Top 100 at #56.

Given the connection between the islands of Pitcairn, Norfolk and Tasmania, it seems apt that Fletcher Christian’s forename should be most popular there. Another Tasmanian connection to the name is that Errol Flynn’s first film role was playing Fletcher Christian in In the Wake of the Bounty.

The name Fletcher is more popular in Australia than elsewhere – in the US, Fletcher is #790 and rising, and in the UK it is #253 and rising.

As surnames for boys become ever more popular, Fletcher is another which seems as if it has plenty of room for growth. The flipside to Archer, it connects us to an enigmatic adventurer who founded an island dynasty, and continues to haunt our imaginations.

POLL RESULT: Fletcher received an approval rating of 88%. 32% of people liked it, and 28% loved it.

Neko and Nikola

31 Friday May 2013

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets

rockhampton-heritageGirls

Airlie Harper

Alexis Ezra

Amity May

Claudia Isobel (Nicholas)

Cleo Ann (Bofton, Freeman)

Eloise Josephine

Nausica

Neko Mahli

Nell Florence

Phoebe Alexandra

Prudence Ethel Annie

Sophia Angelica

Tanika Dawn

Tigerlily Elizabeth Margaret (Wolfgang)

Zara Rylan (Oliver, Lachlan)

 

Boys

Abel Thomas

Alby Jack

Angus Baxter

Axel David Tommy (Sixten)

Egan Robert (Cohen)

Jamar Scott

Koby Charlie (Zaviiah)

Nikola Georgios

Otto Leonard (Freya, Leo)

Otty Brian

Quillan Fox

Seth Isaac (Lucas, Levi)

Stirling Horace

William Francisco

Zane Oscar (Axel, Arielle, Shaya)

 

Most popular names this week

Girls: Sophia

Boys: Harrison

(Photo is of the heritage village in Rockhampton, Queensland)

Misty Lee and Saffron Autumn

24 Friday May 2013

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Autumn-mistTwins

Jieze Jamie and Juzzi Jason (Jysen, Jaith, Jodin)

 

Girls

Aluka Kadek (Koa)

Amelia Winsome

Anya Helia (Zak)

Betsy Rose (Lily, Fern, Alice)

Etta Jane (Opal, Declan)

Greta Lucy (Annabel)

Indii Elle Gigi (Cooper)

Kerry Patricia (Brooke, Micka, Jack)

Lydie Louise

Marlow Elise (Warner)

Maud Queenie Joyce Elva May (Jaya, Kael, Lila)

Misty Lee (Willow)

Saffron Autumn (Clover)

Saraid Kate

Violet Amabel (Findlay, Archer)

 

Boys

Billy Archer

Dougie Christopher (Mitchell, Elisha, Nicholas)

Campbell Stuart (Jasmine, Patrick)

George Miroljub

Gordon John Douglas

Harry Romuald (Evelyn)

James Roland

Jensen Johannes (Poppy)

Marcello Peter

Monty William (Florence)

Ned Robert (Banjo)

Quinn Thomas (Liam, Reegan)

Stirling Claude Alexander (Izabella)

Theodore Louis

Tory David (Millar, Bryn)

 

Most popular names this week

Girls: Mia

Boys: Harrison

(Photo shows autumn mist in Armidale, New South Wales)

Will Olive Become Too Popular?

18 Saturday May 2013

Posted by A.O. in Naming Assistance

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Biblical names, choosing baby names, classic names, honouring, middle names, name popularity, sibsets, underused classics, vintage names

OlivesSophie and Michael are expecting their second child in a couple of months, who will be a brother or sister to their daughter Mary. If it’s a boy, he will be named Harry, which is a family name, but girls names have proved harder to decide upon. Sophie and Michael’s surname begins with a hard C and ends in an OH sound eg Carrow, and they are hoping to use family name May in the middle, but for the right name they could change it.

Sophie and Michael’s Name List

  • Olive – this is their first choice, but Sophie is worried it could become too popular in the future
  • Alice – a name both of them like
  • Tabitha – Lucy’s choice
  • Gertrude – Lucy’s choice; a family name
  • Annabelle – Michael’s choice

Names Rejected

  • Matilda and Millicent – don’t want another name starting with M
  • Cate – really like it, but doesn’t match with surname

Sophie is very concerned about popularity, and definitely wouldn’t consider any name in the Top 20. She loves that she has has never met another little Mary. They are looking for a name which is original, but not too “out there”; ideally an under-the-radar classic which is clunky, currently under-used, and enduring. They prefer shorter names which can’t be abbreviated to a diminutive form.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Your Name List

Olive

This is a spunky little name which sounds nice with your surname and would make an adorable sister for Mary. No wonder it’s your favourite choice! Realistically, if you had an Olive she would be statistically unlikely to share her classroom with anyone else of that name, but I can see you might be worried about future popularity.

Alice

A pretty classic which isn’t even in the Top 50 in your area, and rising sedately in popularity. I’m crazy about Mary and Alice as sisters, and if you decided that Olive was too “risky” a choice for you, despite being more popular, Alice would probably be safer.

Tabitha

Very cute name which I think would be an excellent choice. If popularity is a real concern, then Tabitha is very under-used, and likely to remain so.

Gertrude

I think Gertrude would be quite a hip choice, and Mary and Gertrude definitely make an old-style name set. Gertrude is easily shortened to Gertie or Trudy though.

Annabelle

Very pretty and feminine, and now losing popularity rather than gaining. I would prefer the Scottish Annabel spelling with your surname though, and Mary and Annabel somehow feels a better match than Mary and Annabelle. I read on Nameberry somewhere that men prefer Annabelle though!

Other Names You Might Like

Vera

A simple vintage name which has just rejoined the charts, and has the same V sound as Olive. If Olive has gone from hip to fashionable, Vera still feels like it’s at the hip phase.

Florence

A similar sound and feel to Alice, but more fashionable and much less popular (although rising nicely). I like Mary and Florence together, and I think this sounds fantastic with your surname. Florence does lend itself to several nicknames though.

Jemima

Reminds me of Tabitha – both three-syllable clunky-stylish Biblical names with animal-related meanings that joined the charts in the 1960s and have never made the Top 100. Neither of them have an obvious nickname either.

Greta

Has the same clunky sound as Gertrude, yet while Gertrude is at the proto-hip stage, Greta has been hip seemingly forever. On and off the charts, it’s often in use, but never come anywhere near being popular.

Lydia

Lydia has that quirky upper-class feel of Annabelle and is from the New Testament like Tabitha. This name is a genuine underused classic, having never left the charts while never joining the Top 100.

June

Simple, pretty vintage name with a fashionable OO sound, and a great match as a sister to Mary. You couldn’t use May as the middle name, but June Annabelle is cute.

Willa

Has never charted in Australia, but fast becoming a hip name choice. I could see this as the Olive of the future … a nice long time in the future!

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

I wonder if you would have already decided on Olive if you weren’t worried about its future popularity? Olive didn’t even make the Top 100 in your area last year, but that’s probably not much comfort. It’s a fashionable name, has got a celebrity “buzz” around it, and you’ve already seen little Olives appearing in your neighbourhood. You may have even read my article where I note that Olive is currently on the same trajectory that Ruby was 15 years ago.

I think you have to ask yourself exactly how upset you would be if Olive became popular down the track, and exactly why it would bother you. This is something far more likely to bug you than your daughter. Children usually like their own name, and often bond with others who share it.

I’ve noticed that girls who were given a name rising in popularity nearly always love their name, probably because they are receiving constant subtle reminders that others value it. Your own name is more popular now than it would have been when you were born – has that really been a problem for you?

You also have to ask yourself – what happens if you don’t pick Olive, and the name never does become that popular? Would you be regretful that you didn’t go with your first choice, based on something that might happen?

At the very least, if you did go with Olive, you would be doing so with your eyes open, knowing that it could become popular in time, and resigned to that happening.

In my experience, savvy parents who choose the name they love best even while foreseeing future popularity don’t end up with many regrets. There might be an occasional twinge of annoyance at meeting yet another baby with their child’s name, or an eye roll when the name data comes out, but in general they are happy they went with their favourite name, and glad that they got to pick it while it was still fresh.

You don’t need to make a choice now – you don’t even know if you’re having a girl, and you already have a great list of names up your sleeve if you ultimately decide that Olive isn’t right for you.

Good luck, and let us know what name you went with!

UPDATE: The baby’s name is Olive!

POLL RESULT: People preferred the second choice of Alice for Mary’s sister, at 21% of the vote, but Olive wasn’t far behind in the #2 position at 18%.

 

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Enter your email address to follow this blog

Categories

Archives

Recent Comments

A.O.'s avatarwaltzingmorethanmati… on Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang…
Madelyn's avatarMadelyn on Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang…
JD's avatardrperegrine on Can Phoebe Complete This …
A.O.'s avatarwaltzingmorethanmati… on Rua and Rhoa
redrover23's avatarredrover23 on Rua and Rhoa

Blogroll

  • Appellation Mountain
  • Baby Name Pondering
  • Babynamelover's Blog
  • British Baby Names
  • Clare's Name News
  • For Real Baby Names
  • Geek Baby Names
  • Name Candy
  • Nameberry
  • Nancy's Baby Names
  • Ren's Baby Name Blog
  • Sancta Nomina
  • Swistle: Baby Names
  • The Art of Naming
  • The Baby Name Wizard
  • The Beauty of Names
  • Tulip By Any Name

RSS Feed

  • RSS - Posts

RSS Posts

  • Celebrity Baby News: Melanie Vallejo and Matt Kingston
  • Names from the TV Show “Cleverman”
  • Can Phoebe Complete This Sibset?
  • Zarah Zaynab and Wolfgang Winter
  • Baby, How Did You Get That Name?
  • Celebrity Baby News: Media Babies
  • Celebrity Baby News: Adelaide Crows Babies
  • Celebrity Baby News: Chris and Rebecca Judd
  • Names at Work: Name News From the World of Business and Employment
  • Celebrity Baby News: Sporting Round Up

Currently Popular

  • Celebrity Baby News: Tony and Erica Modra
  • Rare Boys Names From the 1950s
  • Celebrity Baby News: Radio Babies
  • Girls Names From Stars and Constellations
  • Celebrity Baby News: Deborah Knight and Lindsay Dunbar

Tags

celebrity baby names celebrity sibsets english names famous namesakes fictional namesakes honouring locational names middle names name combinations name history name meaning name popularity name trends nicknames popular names saints names sibsets surname names twin sets unisex names

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Waltzing More Than Matilda
    • Join 517 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Waltzing More Than Matilda
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...