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June, 2009

LOVE THAT NAME, but…

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

Wherever Ewe Go, There Ewe Are is the wonderful blog of today’s guest blogger formally known as “Ewe,” an American living in the United Kingdom with her Scottish husband.  She’s the mom of two sons, ages four and two, and is expecting a daughter, known for now as Lambchop.

luckylillamb-costumeI always thought I’d know exactly what I would name my daughter, but now that I’m actually having one, I’m seriously waffling. There are soooo many lovely girl names out there. And as a result, some of my ’sure thing’ name combination options aren’t looking so ’sure thing’ anymore. In fact, a whole slew of girls names that I have always thought I would give ultra-serious consideration to were almost immediately off the table for a whole variety of reasons.

Here, girls’ names I love and admire….but WON’T be using.

1. FREYA. I adore the name Freya. In fact, back when I was pregnant with Boo, before I knew Boo was a “he”, Freya was at the top of my list for a wee girl. It’s a gorgeous name that doesn’t even crack the top 1000 list in the U.S., which is a head-scratcher for me because it’s a chronic top 20 name in England and Scotland. But, sadly, that’s why we took it off our list now that we’re actually having a girl; it’s waaaay too popular here. I see so many little Freyas everywhere I go here. If we lived in the states, this would be our likely choice. But we don’t, so it’s out.

2. MALIA. Another long, long-time favorite name. One of my sister’s best friends growing up was named Malia; and I fell even more in love with it during my six years in Hawaii. It’s just so pretty when it rolls off the tongue. But then we elected a new President last year, and guess what? His oldest girl’s name is Malia, which means it’s going to go straight up the popularity charts. Plus, it’s Hawaiian, and my husband isn’t quite as keen on the idea.

3. TRIONA. My love of Celtic and Irish music led me to this name years ago. It’s a shortened version of Catriona or Caitriona. But my husband pointed out that, technically, I was pronouncing it wrong (tree-oh-nah) when it should be pronounced like ‘trina’. And he was only willing to consider the full version of Catriona, which faces the same pronuncation issues, which I’m not as keen on. Plus, we already have an Auntie Trina, which violates one of my existing naming rules. (Not to mention the fact that a good friend made fun of it years ago, but I forgive her. She had a good point. heh heh)

4. AUDREY. Audrey is just a lovely, lovely name, made famous by the even lovelier Ms Hepburn. But it’s been screaming up the charts in the U.S. the past few years, and is clearly headed for the top 20 very soon. An old-fashioned name that is clearly coming back around, and rightfully so. But its popularity means it’s not for us.

5. LEILANI. Another gorgeous Hawaiian name that I’ve always admired; another ‘no’ from my husband.

6. LORELEI. Ditto the Hawaiian gorgeousness. And made even more mainstream in popularity by the quirky television series The Gilmore Girls. And now envision the ‘too Hawaiian’ name being vetoed by my husband with the addition of an eye-roll. Sigh.

7. ADELE. Another lovely, old-fashioned name that I think deserves to make a comeback. But I also can’t quite imagine giving it to a baby because it still sounds like an “older” name. I suspect that’s the reason it still hasn’t re-entered the top 1000 names in the U.S. We’d have to use a nickname, like Ada (and we have one of those in the family already, so ‘no’) or Addie while Lambchop was little. And, to be honest, I’m not huge on nicknames, so it’s an unlikely choice for us.

8. VIOLETA. Pronounced vee-oh-letta, I think this is a very pretty, sweet name for a girl. A lovely flower name, the prettier version of Violet. But one of Ramekin’s best friends on our street is named Violeta, so no go.

9. ANNIKA. On paper, and on the tongue, the name fits all of our potential naming criteria. It’s a lovely Scandinavian name (Swedish, though, not Norwegian), which would probably delight my Norwegian MIL. But after much –and I mean much– consideration while I seriously considered it, I just don’t think it will work with our childrens’ last names. There’s just something not quite right about it for us…. so it was with regret I took it out of serious contention. (I suppose it could make a comeback, though…you never know.)

10a and 10b. AILSA and ISLA. Both names are beautiful, traditional Scottish girl names that my Scotland-born husband really likes. But Isla is incredibly popular right now, so I’m not interested in using it. And, while Ailsa is lovely, the truth is, it sounds foreign coming off my tongue. I struggle to pronounce it properly, and I want a name I can easily pronounce for my own daughter. When I say Ailsa, it sounds more like Elsa, an almost equally lovely Scandinavian name, and, incidentally, the name of one of my husband’s (now deceased) Norwegian Aunts. But we know a four-month old Elsa. And I don’t like the look of it as much as Ailsa. So it lingers on the discarded names list.

11. SERENA. Pretty, but ruined by the existence of the teeny bopper television show Gossip Girl. I can only imagine how many younger moms-to-be will be using this name for their own daughters in the coming years.

12. JOELLE. Getting really tired of my husband’s eye rolls, which is what I got when I suggested it. And a reminder that we’re not French.

13. ARLETTE. My husband again reminds me that we’re not French, the party-pooper.

Bonus round: A few additional lovely, old-fashioned girly names we won’t be using because they’re just too darn popular over here, all in the top 20: HANNAH; CHARLOTTE; OLIVIA; LILY

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We’d like to offer our CONGRATULATIONS on the arrival of three beautiful (and beautifully named) baby girls born to members of the extended Nameberry family:

ESME JULIETTE, daughter of our friend Hilary at the wonderful pregnancy site thecradle.com

esme

EULALIE, daughter of one of favorite bloggers (and nameberry guest bloggers), Elisabeth, of youcantcallitit, where you can find her amusing description of  how she arrived at the name, and….

VIOLET KATHERINE, daughter of nameberry boards regular Kristen, who offered her thanks to all of you, writing  “Your book, the website and the advice of the wonderful ladies who are regulars on your forums led me to choose a name that had meaning for me and my family (instead of a name that I simply thought sounded cool) .”

violet

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Posted in British names, European baby names, Scottish baby names, creative names for girls, family names, girls' names, guest bloggers, international baby names, name ideas, nameberry babies | 20 Comments »

DAD NAMES: NOTEWORTHY NAMES OF SOME FAMOUS FATHERS

Friday, June 19th, 2009

It’s Pop’s turn!  For Mother’s Day we took a look at some of the more interesting names of the mothers of distinguished people, and now we do the same for the paternal parent.  Once more,  it turns out that an unusual number of past (and a few present) notables have had Dads with interesting, and sometimes surprising, names.  Here are some examples to prove the point:

ABRAHAM –Bob Dylan

ALFRED (called Freddie) — John Lennon

ALLANHerman Melville

ALLESSANDRO — Maria Montessori

ANDREJ — Andy Warhol

ARCHULUS — Truman Capote

AUGUSTINE –  George Washington

BAILEY –  Ray Charles, Maya Angelou

BELMONT — Humphrey Bogart

CASSIUS –  Mohammed Ali

CLARENCE –  Ernest Hemingway, Billie Holiday

CLYDE  –  John Wayne

CORNELIUS –  Tennessee Williams

DELBERT  — Gene Autry

DOMENICO –  Christopher Columbus

ELIAS –  Walt Disney, Cary Grant

EMILE –  Henri Matisse

FERNANDO  — Luciano Pavarotti

FLOYDTina Turner

FRANCIS  –  Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Zappa, Georgia O’Keeffe (his middle name Calyxtus)

GARRETT –  Edward Hopper

GERRIT –  Rembrandt van Rijn

GUSTAVArnold Schwarzenegger

HOMER –  Johnny Carson

ISTVAN  — Bela Lugosi

JAKOB  –  Sigmund Freud, Johannes Brahms

JONAS –  Ava Gardner

JOSIAH –  Benjamin Franklin

JUDAH  –  Isaac Asimov

ingrid-bergman-with-dad JUSTUS  –  Ingrid Bergman (shown)

KNUD  –  Henrik Ibsen

LEO –  Jack Kerouac

LESLIE  –  Virginia Woolf

LUDOVICOMichelangelo

MORRIS –  George Gershwin

MOSES  — Milton Berle

MURRY –  William Faulkner

NEWELL  –  Andrew Wyeth

NICCOLO  –  Marco Polo

PAVEL –  Anton Chekhov

SOL –  J. D. Salinger

SQUIRE –  Daniel Boone

SYLVIO –  Madonna

THEODOUS  –  Vincent Van Gogh

VERNON  –  Elvis Presley

WINTON  –  James Dean

Last time many of you shared the names of your own wonderful parents–and we hope you’ll do so again!

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Posted in Uncategorized, boys' names, celebrity names, family names, famous names, namesakes | 14 Comments »

THE BABY NAME DEBATES

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Lookydaddy.com’s Brian Sargent, today’s guest blogger, is the stay-at-home dad of now-four-year-old twin girls and a third-grader.  Those are his daughters, below.

My wife and I knew it would be tough to name twin girls, so we assigned ourselves jobs. My wife’s job was to suggest possible names for consideration. My job was to say I didn’t like them.

img_1706Not to be immodest, but I did my job well.

“Rebecca.”

“No.”

“Jocelyn.”

“No.”

“Hester.”

“You’re not even trying, anymore, are you?”

I did my job so well that toward the end of my wife’s pregnancy, I began to fear for my life.  With each passing week, in an attempt to sleep comfortably, my wife had stacked foam pads, sleeping bags, pillows, and even an air mattress on her side of our marital bed, and as the twins’ due date approached, I knew that all she would have to do was roll over in the middle of the night to literally crush the baby-name objections right out of me.

I kid, of course. My wife could have never rolled over without my help.

Finally, exasperated with the selfless way in which I saved my children from names that belonged to my ex-students or had too many Ys, this is what my wife did: She wrote down a list of her ten favorite names, posted it on the refrigerator, and informed me none of the names could be removed from the list unless they were replaced with better ones.

So there they stood: Ten names. Who knows where they came from? Some I recognized as my wife’s coworkers. Some may have been from TV shows. And some were there simply to make me wonder why I had ever thought my wife and I had enough in common to successfully raise a child together. And, unless I could come up with better, two of them would become my twin girls.

I never came up with better. The two girls currently pulling on my arms as I type, giving my spellchecker a run for its money, bear names that came from that list of ten. And you know what? It’s fine. In fact, it’s more than fine. When I look back on it, I’m not sure why I was such a jerk about the whole name-choosing process in the first place. My girls, my beautiful, wonderful Lila and Victoria, are beautiful and wonderful no matter what we call them. And besides, they turned out to be identical, so it’s not like we use their names anyway.  Beats us who is who.

But, happily, neither of them are is Hester.

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Posted in baby name debates, girls' names, guest bloggers, naming multiples, twin names, twins | 28 Comments »

70′S BABY NAMES: Beyond Tiffany & Todd

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

disco-baby When we talk about vintage names, we’re usually harking back to the Gay ’90s or the Roaring  ’20s at the latest. But what about more recent vintage vintages? Are there any names that were popular just a couple of decades ago that are already ready for revival?–or are they all still too me, mom, or grandpa-ish?

The leading  five girls’ names across the decade 0f the 70s were Jennifer, Amy, Melissa, Michelle and Kimberly, and among the boys’ Top 20–mostly dominated by classics–were Jason, Brian, Kevin, Jeffrey and Scott.  I’m not suggesting that we’re quite ready for another generation of little Lisas (#6), any more than I’d suggest hanging a disco ball in your living room, but there are some buried possibilities further down in the mix that just might be getting ripe enough to pick again.

The names below were all in the top half of the popularity list throughout the Swinging 70s, and have either slid off the current list entirely or are very near the the bottom of the Top 1000. Most of them don’t particularly scream 70’s–some are semi-classics that were fading away at that time, a few are the kind of nickname names that are coming back into style.

GIRLS

ALMA

BERNADETTE

BILLIE

CONSTANCE

DEBORAH

DORA

DOROTHY

EDITH

ELLEN

FELICIA

GINGER

JILL

JO

LIZA

LORETTA

LORRAINE

MARIBEL

MARJORIE

MARCIA/MARSHA

MELINDA

PAMELA

PATRICE

PAULINE

PENNY

RAMONA

ROCHELLE

ROXANNE

SALLY

SHEILA

SONJA

TAMARA

TINA

BOYS

CHESTER

CLAUDE

CLAY

CLINT

CLYDE

CORNELIUS

DION

FLOYD

FRED/FREDDIE

GENE

GLENN

GORDON

KENT

KIRK

MICKEY

MORRIS

NEIL/NEAL

OTIS

PERRY

PETE

RALPH

REX

STEWART

TED

THADDEUS

TIM

TY

VIRGIL

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Posted in Uncategorized, baby name popularity, baby names of 2008, boys' names, girls' names, name history, name style, name trends, overlooked names, vintage baby names | 14 Comments »

MINI-NAMES

Monday, June 15th, 2009

minimeThey’re the miniest of appellations, beloved by novelists and children first learning to write their names.  A handful just two letters long, these are names that get right to the point.

Some are short – very short – forms of more elaborate names.  Bea from Beatrice, for instance, or Jed from Jedidiah.  Others are merely their short and sweet selves: Fay, Tai, Rex.

With a few exceptions, we skipped the obvious short forms: There’s no Jim, Ben, or Pam here.  Also skipped some trendy favorites – Ava and Zac, for instance – that get so much play.  We tried to be democratic, but to present a collection of names you might actually want to use.

But we’ve been talking long enough.  Here, the shortest names in the book:

Two-letter Names

AL
BO
CY
DI
ED
EM
FE
HY
MO
OZ
PO
RY
TY
VI

Short forms

girls

BEA
CAM
DOT
DRU
KAY
SAM (obviously, for boys too)

boys

ART
ASH
CAL
GIG
GUS
HAL
IKE
JEB
JED
JOE
KIT
LOU
MAX
NAT
NED
RAY
TOM
WES

Three-letter names

girls

ADA
AMY
ANN
EVE
FAY
FIG
IDA
IVY
JOY
LUZ
MAE or MAY
NOA
PIA
TAI
ZOE

boys

ARI
DOV
ELI
FOX
GUY
IRA
JOB
KAI
LEO
LEX
PAX
REX
ROY
VAN
YUL
ZEN

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Posted in name ideas, nicknames | 9 Comments »

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