Baby Name of the Day: Levon

Levon

Image via Wikipedia

The name was a success for Elton John – in more ways than one, and his story is part of music lore.

Thanks to Lindsey for suggesting Levon as our Baby Name of the Day.

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Starbaby News: Welcome Spike!

Spike Lee at the Vanity Fair kickoff party for...

Spike Lee; Image via Wikipedia

For one fleeting second, I thought this was a wild rumor when Photoquilty posted it to the AppMtn Facebook group earlier today.  But it appears that Mike Myers and Kelly Tisdale really have welcomed a new baby boy named Spike.

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Mocked on Gawker = Big Time?

I was working on a regular old post last night when I glanced at the sidebar.  The site stats were up.  I shrugged and went back to work, but the next time I clicked through, the bar for September 28, 2011 had shot THROUGH THE ROOF.

And then a Google alert tipped me off to the reason: Appellation Mountain was being mocked on Gawker.  Traffic stopped just short of the day Lisa Belkin wrote a (super flattering, still hanging in my office) piece about the site for the New York Times’ Motherlode blog.

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Fetching Names: Joyful Edition

Ferris Wheel

Ferris Wheel at Virginia Beach, August 2011

There are names that feel happy – Beau always sounds joyful to my ear.  So do names like Lulu and Zuzu, Bay and Bree.  Can you imagine Winnie having a bad day, or Hugo being a big ol’ grouch?

Or maybe you can.  Maybe Arabella sounds like a happy name to you, while Beau is more of a bandit.

But there are names that do, indeed, mean cheerful or lively or upbeat, and there are a few that I think we should seriously consider for our daughters.

Allegra – Yes, she’s an allergy medication in the US, one with a seemingly bottomless advertising budget.  But she’s also a given name used by the stylish, from Lord Byron to Donatella Versace.  Allegra Kent was a famous ballerina, muse to legendary choreographer George Balanchine.  In music, the term allegro means cheerful, bright, lively, ultimately from the Latin alacer.  If you’ve been watching The Little Einsteins, you know all about allegro.  With nickname options Allie and Aggie, she’s the kind of name that should wipe out any thought of fenofexadine.

Ananda – At first glance, she’s 80s staple Amanda, worn by Mean Girls on Melrose Place and John Hughes flicks alike.  But look again, and she’s from the Sanskrit for bliss.  Even if you’ve no subcontinent heritage to claim, her familiarity, and easy short forms Annie and Andi, should make her wearable.  Masculine form Anand also has some serious cross-cultural appeal.

Blythe – She’s brief, even brisk.  From the same Old English soup that led to our word bliss came the word blithe.  Blithe means happy – though it can also imply carelessness.  Actress Blythe Danner has won Tony and Emmy awards in her own right, but you know her best as mom to Gwyneth Paltrow.  If Brooke and Blair are mainstream options for girls, why not Blythe?

Felicity - The list would be incomplete without this mix of modern television heroine and Colonial girl in calico.  Nicknames like Fliss and even Flick make her a little less Puritan, though they still have a certain retro cool.  She comes from a cluster of related names all derived from the Latin word for fortunate.  Brother Felix is hotter than hot, but I’d call Felicity just lukewarm, and Felicia absolutely chilly.  And yet, Felicia is also the least often heard of the three, and perhaps one to consider.  There’s also medieval variant Felice, which is masculine in Italian.

Gioia, Gioconda – Celebrity chef Giada DeLaurentis reminded us about the many great Italian appellations that start with GiGianna, Giovanna, even Giuliana.  Gioia is literally the Italian word for delight, usually translated joy.  Joy is another one that feels just on the verge of a comeback – earlier this month, Nameberry declared Joy and June the new hot middle names.  As for Gioconda, while she’s a mouthful – too close to anaconda for some to consider – she comes from the Latin Iucunda - pleasant.  Gioconda is an alternate name for Da Vinci’s masterwork, the Mona Lisa.

Noemi, Noemie – The Biblical Naomi comes from a Hebrew name meaning pleasant, but somehow her story feels heavy, and while the name is lovely, I don’t get a light and joyful vibe from her.  Instead, I wonder if the Italian and French versions of the name might sound fresher – and even happier?  The oe sound occurs in chart toppers like Chloe and Zoe, as well as the much-discussed Boheme and word name Poet.

You can go farther, of course.  Songstress Macy Gray named her youngest Cassius but calls him Happy.  Word name Merry falls somewhere between outrageous and expected.  And then there’s a whole category of names with positive associations.  Gretchen doesn’t mean happy, but Gretchen Rubin is the author of the New York Times bestseller The Happiness Project, as well as the associated blog.

Are there other happy names that come to mind?  Or maybe names that just plain feel happy and joyful to you?

Baby Name of the Day: Florida

Florida exhibit: World's Fair 1964

Florida exhibit from the World's Fair 1964; Image by karen horton via Flickr

She’s a place name associated with beaches, oranges, cartoon mice, and Spring Break.

Thanks to Kathleen for suggesting Florida as our Baby Name of the Day.

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Baby Name of the Day: Carmela

¡Ay Carmela! (film)

Image via Wikipedia

She’s a spiritual place name and a mobster’s missus.

Thanks to Brieta for suggesting her daughter’s name as our Baby Name of the Day: Carmela.

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Baby Name of the Day: Penn

Taken in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in April ...

William Penn statue atop City Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Image via Wikipedia

He’s the keystone state, an appealing young actor, and a dark comic genius.

Thanks to Danielle for suggesting Penn as our Baby Name of the Day.

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Sunday Summary: 9/25/11

seat number 25

Image by Leo Reynolds via Flickr

We were in Franklin’s General Store last night, just a few blocks from our house, the kind of place you buy microbrews and Wry Baby onesies and robot matroyshka dolls when I heard it – a mom calling her three y.o. daughter Loretta.  Be still my heart.

I truly appreciate the support for the changes I announced last week.  Writing Fetching Names felt almost artificial, but it also felt good to try something new.  Plus, it quickly became one of the most commented articles here, and I do truly value posts that can spark a conversation.

Speaking of conversation, elsewhere in the blogosphere:

  • Are you following this story about a couple in the Chicago ‘burbs who can’t choose their daughter’s name?  Dad wants Emily or Madelyn, while mom prefers McKenna or Addilyne.  They’ve turned to a Facebook poll to help them choose.  You can vote, too, but I just can’t get excited about any of their finalists;
  • Call me crazy, but I adore the name Galileo.  Lou at Mer de Nomes mentioned Blur’s bass player Alex James has kids called Geronimo, Galileo, Artemis, Beatrix, and Sable.  Oh, and Artemis?  Is a boy!
  • I love the idea of Vine, another nature name with an edge suggested by Bewitching Baby Names;
  • Marginamia mentioned Warby Parker, the brand that makes me wish for flawed vision.  Though I’ve no need for their spectacles, I do enjoy their product names: Thatcher, Crosby, Huxley, Mabel
  • Inspired by Reverie, Namemustsay looked into other Rev- names.  Reverence, Reveille, or Revel, anyone?
  • ForReal spotted a girl called Ramsi.  Sorry, but there is nothing you can do to convince me that Ramsey is anything other than a masculine name;
  • Did you take this quiz at Lil Sugar?
  • How about the Change a Letter, Change a Gender game at You Can’t Call It “It”?
  • Love this story at Nancy’s Baby Names about a girl called Strawberry.

Two celebrity birth announcements this week:

  • Emily Deschanel welcomed a son, Henry.  Dad is It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia’s David Hornsby, so kid is Henry Hornsby – now that’s total retro storybook character, a sidekick for Encyclopedia Brown or Dennis the Menace;
  • Ana Oritz welcomed a son named Rafael, a little brother for Paloma Louise.  She and husband Noah Lebenzon have yet to settle on a middle name.

Tune in tomorrow at Nameberry for a look back at the most newsworthy names last week!

Baby Name of the Day: Carol

"Where The Wild Things Are" graffiti...

Where the Wild Things Are graffiti in Saskatoon; Image via Wikipedia

On a girl, this choice is as dated as Mrs. Brady’s bellbottoms, but how about on a boy?

Thanks to Charlotte for suggesting Carol as our Baby Name of the Day.

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Fetching Names

Remember this scene from Mean Girls?  I think about it often when I’m working on posts.

If you haven’t seen the movie, Gretchen is trying to get “fetch” – meaning cool – to catch on as the new slang.  She’s one of her high school’s very most popular girls, along with reigning queen Regina, air-headed Karen, and, at least for part of the movie, a newcomer played by Lindsay Lohan.

Gretchen’s gambit fails, but it could’ve worked.  Fetching comes from the Old English feccan – to bring.  The word’s meaning has evolved over time, but by the late nineteenth century, fetching was high praise – for example, a fetching bonnet.

The world is filled with attractive names, names that don’t get enough attention – names that never, like Gretchen’s slang – happen.  This series is my attempt to highlight a handful of names that aren’t on everyone’s list but might wear well anyhow.  They’re short lists, but I think there’s great potential in each of the names.

The first list of Fetching Names is inspired by mean girls – or maybe not so mean girls with great names.  We’ve grown up with on the small screen and in movies, too.

Blair – She’s just one sound removed from the fashionable French Claire, plus she’s been worn by two enduring small screen poor little rich girls: The Facts of Life’s blonde shopaholic Blair Warner in the 1980s, and more recently, the scheming, but not irredeemable  brunette Blair Waldorf of Gossip Girl fame.  Some might dismiss Blair as borrowed from the boys, but she’s scarcely used by either gender since the start of this century.

CadyKatie is everywhere – one-part Katharine Hepburn, one-part Kaitlyn short form.  Cady takes her in a different direction, thanks to suffragette Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Mean Girl made famous by Lohan in 2004′s hit flick.  She’s novel but not quite nouveau, and despite her current sound, has never really caught on.  Not only is Stanton a worthy role model, but despite Ms. Lohan’s woes, let’s not forget that her character did the right thing by the end of the movie.

Edie – Take Evie, mix with Eden and you’d arrive at this rarity.  Andy Warhol made a 1965 indie movie called Poor Little Rich Girl starring Edie Sedgwick.  Sedgwick was, in real life, a socialite heiress, an early version of Paris Hilton, born Edith Minton Sedgwick.

Veronica – 1989′s dark high school comedy Heathers starred Christian Slater as J.D. and Winona Ryder as Veronica Sawyer.  Veronica was a good girl – a “girl scout cookie” – who grew up to hang with her high school’s most popular, powerful trio – three girls all named Heather.  Despite her vibrant v, Veronica has been falling since the 1970s, but she still sounds surprising.

Other names in this category have made it big in recent years.  There’s Sweet Valley High’s Lila, Disney Channel original series The Suite Life’s London, and Legally Blonde’s Elle, all of which are very much in vogue.

Would you use a fictional character’s name for your child?  Does the character have to be clearly on the side of good, like Luke Skywalker, or are shades of gray okay?