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POPULAR BABY NAMES 2009: From here, there and everywhere

Monday, January 4th, 2010

We’ve still got five months to wait before we get the official word on what the top names across America were in 2009, but in the meantime we can console ourselves with the lists that have started to come in of the most popular names in various US cities, states and even individual hospitals, and in in other cities and countries around the world.

boy-globe One thing seems clear: the romantic trio of Isabella, Sophia and Olivia is running a three-way race for first place in many areas of  the world, while Jack continues his reign in a number of English-speaking countries. 

We’ve been looking  at the lists that have been released so far and have put together a selection (or hodgepodge) of some of the more interesting choices: top-ranked international names that are barely known to us, surprising choices that have popped up in unexpected places, and just plain noteworthy names–and we’ll be updating it as more results come in.

GIRLS

 ANDELA  –  #2 in Serbia

AOIFE  –  # 4 in Derry, Northern Ireland

AURORA  –  #8 in Finland

CHARLOTTE –  #2 in Canberra, Australia

CHLOE  –  #1 in Sheffield, England and Queensland, Australia

DARYNA  –  #5 in Ukraine

ELLIE –  #1 in Derry, Northern Ireland

EMILIA  –  #2 in Finland

EVA–  #8 in Northern Ireland

EVIE–  #4 in Sheffield, England

ISLA — #2 In Aberdeenshire, Scotland

JOVANA  –  #4 in Serbia

KATIE –#1 in Northern Ireland

KAYLEE — #5 in Flagstaff, Arizona

LÉA  –  #2 in France (more…)

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Posted in 2009 baby names, Australian baby names, British baby names, European baby names, French baby names, Irish baby names, Uncategorized, baby name popularity, baby names of 2009, boys' names, ethnic baby names, foreign name trends, girl names, girls' names, international baby names, name popularity, nameberry babies, popular names | 5 Comments »

BALLERINA NAMES: Names for the Nutcracker Season

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

One of the staples of the holiday season is The Nutcracker ballet, making this the perfect moment  for balletomane Heather Stevenson’s guest blog on the enchanted world of exotic ballerina names.

Many little girls proclaim that they want to be ballerinas when they grow up—most are drawn to the sequined tutus, the rhinestone tiaras, the shiny satin pointe shoes, and the chance to wear make-up.  (Leaping and twirling to music are bonuses.)  As a little girl, I was not immune to these charms, and I began studying ballet at the age of ten.  Perhaps unlike most girls who take up balletgelseykdance, however, part of ballet’s appeal to me was that it fed my growing fascination with names.  Read the program at just about any ballet performance, or pick up a book on dance history, and you will find an array of beautiful ballerina names of many different nationalities.

A hundred years ago, the Ballets Russes began presenting their first performances in Paris.  Comprised predominantly of expatriate Russians, the fledgling company became wildly popular, and interest in dance soared.  Touring companies such as the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo were offshoots of the original Ballets Russes, and they brought ballet to small towns all across the United States.   Additionally, Russian choreographer George Balanchine honed his talent with the Ballets Russes, and eventually immigrated to America, where he began what was to become the New York City Ballet.  The glamour of these dancers who had traveled the world before showing up in places like Lincoln, Nebraska was matched by their exotic, “Russified” names.  For instance, Lilian Alicia Marks, an English girl who danced with the original Ballets Russes, became Alicia Markova.

These days, most dancers keep their own names, but that hasn’t made reading the roster of a company’s performers any less exciting or exotic.  The American Ballet Theatre in New York, for example, has dancers from the Ukraine, Italy, Cuba, Spain, Argentina, Brazil, Japan, Russia, Uruguay, South Korea, England, France, China, Byelorussia, Australia, Finland, Portugal, and (of course) the United States in their ranks.

The language of ballet is French, but really, dance itself is the language that is spoken within ballet companies.  I myself have had more Russian and Chinese ballet teachers than American ones, and the fact that most of these teachers spoke little English was rarely a problem.  The international flavor of dance was enormously attractive to me as a young girl.  I grew up in Florida and my family never traveled anywhere.  I longed to see more of the world, but I settled for hearing about Beijing and St. Petersburg from my beloved teachers.

Reading magazines and books on dance, and seeing performances of different companies on television, I began to despair that I’d ever become a famous ballerina with a name like Heather Brown.  My favorite dancers had names like Altynai Asylmuratova, Alessandra Ferri, and Sylvie Guillem.  It seemed that you couldn’t be a ballerina without also having a lovely, feminine, and somewhat unique name.  That isn’t entirely true, of course, but reading about ballet could be a goldmine to expectant parents looking for underused girl names with a touch of the theatrical and glamorous .

Here are some intriguing names of dancers, past and present, along with the company with which they are most associated.  Some of these are stage names, but surprisingly, most are not:

ALLA Sizova (Kirov Ballet)

ALLEGRA Kent (New York City Ballet)

ANNELI Alhanko (Royal Swedish Ballet)

ANYA Linden (Royal Ballet)

AURÉLIE Dupont (Paris Opéra Ballet)

CORINA Dumitrescu (Bucharest National Opera Ballet) (more…)

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Posted in European baby names, Russian baby names, Uncategorized, ballerina names, creative names for girls, dancers', dancers' names, ethnic baby names, exotic baby names, favorite names, girl names, girls' names, international baby names, namesakes, unusual baby names | 12 Comments »

2009 BABY NAMES: What Was In, Out, Hot, Not This Year

Friday, December 11th, 2009

2009Calendar_1The biggest baby name news of 2009 was Emma’s rise to the number one spot for girls’ names, becoming only the ninth girls’ name in U.S. history to claim first place.

EMMA unseated EMILY, which slipped to number three, after a 12-year-reign.  ISABELLA moved up to number two, but if taken together with sister ISABEL and ISABELLE, would have been the number one name.

On the boys’ side, the name that would be number one if the Social Security Administration counted all spelling variations together was AIDEN (and AIDAN and AYDEN, et al), which taken together account for more boys than received longtime number one name JACOB.

The only new entry to the girls’ Top Ten was CHLOE, replacing Hannah.  The boys’ Top Ten remained the same.

The names making the fastest leaps up the popularity ladder showed a strong celebrity influence, especially for girls.  The Top Ten Fastest Movers for girls were:

(more…)

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Posted in 2009 baby names, British baby names, British names, European baby names, baby name popularity, baby names from books, baby names from movies, baby names from tv, celebrity baby names, celebrity names, name popularity, name trends, nameberry, popular names | 25 Comments »

BRITISH BABY NAMES: I Have A Feeling We’re Not In Kansas Anymore

Friday, December 4th, 2009

I relish the days when, in the service of nameberry, I allow myself to click through to the birth announcements in Britain’s Daily Telegraph.  The upper-crusty British baby name trends and eccentric (to the American ear) name combinations, oblivious to any conventional notions of “flow,” are my idea of top-flight entertainment.

For my latest survey, I set myself the task of listing only those offbeat names that reflect the English sensibility but are rarely heard heard in the United States – or indeed anywhere else in the world. (They may be rarely heard in Britain too — there are lots more Thomases than Teklas — yet they’re in keeping with upper-class British style.)ozKansas

What I didn’t suspect was how many of them there were.  Choices that originally seemed natural for the list – Henrietta and Imogen, for instance – had to be offloaded to make way for more extraordinary names.

What remains is a selection of quirky British baby names (not all of them actual English choices), many of which are utterly (utterly, dahling!) charming and could bear far more use in the larger world.

Girls

AMBERLEY Rose

AMOR Matilda Grace

ARAMINTA Tyger Grace

(more…)

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Posted in British names, European baby names, quirky names, undiscovered names, unique baby names, unusual baby names, vintage baby names | 13 Comments »

PORTUGUESE NAMES: Avelina & Amaro

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Perhaps because there are so few Portuguese-Americans–just about a million and a half —the name stock  of Portugal has been somewhat neglected by outsiders, especially since it shares so many similarities with the Spanish.

portugal posterBut many Portuguese names have a distinctive flavor of their own, as well as unusual pronunciation conventions, some of which are explained below.   And, as noted by Filipa on one of the nameberry forums, there are specific naming rules, limiting parents to traditional Portuguese names.  No Apples or Armanis in Amadora!  One consequence of these strictures, though, is an extremely  rich variety of diminutives and pet names. 

For the royals of the past, there could be an interminable string of names, as for example the 19th century Queen known as Maria da Gloria Joana Carlota Leopoldina da Cruz Francisca Xavier de Paula Isidora Micaela Gabriela Rafaela Gonzaga da Austria e Braganca.

Being a 97% Roman Catholic country, many Portuguese names come from popular saints or from the Bible–Maria is the perpetual #1 girls’ name., as it is today.  And what are the other popular names in Portugal right now?  Here, according to one newspaper, are the top six of last year:

Girls

MARIA

BEATRIZ

ANA

LEONOR

MARIANA

MATILDE

Also popular:

AVELINA

CATALINA

ELENA

ELIANA

And for boys: (more…)

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Posted in European baby names, Portuguese baby names, Uncategorized, boys' names, ethnic baby names, exotic baby names, foreign name trends, girl names, girls' names | 14 Comments »

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