Sunday Summary: 6/12/11

Number 12

Image by always13 via Flickr

Is it me, or was the coverage of Jennifer Connelly’s new daughter rather restrained?  Connelly and husband Paul Bettany welcomed little Agnes Lark earlier this week.  Agnes joins big brothers Stellan and Kai.  Usually headlines like “stars choose bizarre name” or “stars revive classics” are all over my feedreader a day or two after a birth announcement, but this time?  Crickets.

Since we’ve started with celebrities, let me also mention:

I’m writing a celebrity-inspired baby name post for Nameberry tomorrow.  It’s a two-part series.  My favorites from this week’s list are Miro, Ridge, and Asa.  But it’s a game and you can play, too.

Elsewhere online:

  • The day before Agnes’ birth announcement, Nameberry posted a Say Yes to S list, about choices from Lotus to Leatrice that could join Alice and Frances among the stylish;
  • ForReal spotted a Greta.  She’s climbed modestly since returning to the US Top 1000 in 1999.  (She’d left after 1982.)  I always Greta is one of those short, sweet, complete and completely underrated names.  At #666 in 2010, she’s still far from common;
  • Okay, I kind of like Hennessy.  But please don’t name your daughter Chardonnay;
  • Millicent: too fusty, or ripe for revival?  British Baby Names makes me think the latter;
  • I never liked Sailor or Saylor, but Nancy’s post changed my mind.  All of a sudden, it is less Taylor-goes-to-sea and more quirky gem;
  • Are you reading Namestory?  Proof that even the most common names can have fascinating tales to tell;
  • Did you see this post at Swistle where the older child has the nickname River from Richard IV?  Tough to explain maybe, but pure genius;
  • Elisabeth had some great ideas for Dante Xipil’s little sister.  Ylva is fantastic, and I like Kristen’s suggestion of Kahlo, too.  Kim Kardashian, are you taking notes?  Far more stylish than, say, Kash or Kynlee.

Have too much free time?  I have a Facebook page.

That’s all for this week.  As always, thank you for reading!

Sunday Summary: 8/22/10

Please tell me that I’m not the only person who watched My Fake Fiance, the first pairing of Melissa Joan Hart and Joey Lawrence?  It was raining, the baby was fussy … wait, never mind.  Someone else must’ve tuned in – enough of us for ABC Family to greenlight a new original series called Melissa & Joey.  The series premiered this week, and this time I didn’t watch.  But I did Google enough to learn that Joey is a manny to Mel’s orphaned niece and nephew. The boy is called Ryder and the girl?  Her name is Lennox!  The actress playing Lennox is named Taylor, so maybe Lennox isn’t so outrageous.  Plus, there’s the china.  And a very minor Agatha Christie character was a girl called Lenox Tamplin. But if this one starts appearing embroidered in pink, it’ll be a surprise.

Speaking of character names:

  • Jason Bateman plays Wally in The Switch.  The cute kid answers to  Sebastian, but that’s a solid Top 100 pick these days.  Will Bateman breathe new life into Walter and Wallace?
  • The Nanny McPhee sequel gives us kids called Norman, Megsie, Vincent, and their London cousins Cyril and Celia.  The young actors’ names are interesting, too – Asa Butterfield played Norman, and Eros Vlahos played Cyril.  Aggie – the baby from the first Nanny McPhee flick – also features in the plot, though she’s all grown up.  In the 2005 movie, Aggie was played by twins named Hebe and Zinnia.  That’s quite a pair!

While we’re on the subject on sibsets:

Elsewhere online:

And lastly, the name was released for Paz Vega’s third child, son Lenon, a little brother for Orson and Ava.

But here’s the important news: next week is re-run week here at Appellation Mountain.  I periodically try to update posts from 2008 because, you know, time marches on.  But I’ve never done so in a systematic way.  So instead of a new post, look for a week’s worth of revamped, revised, and re-invigorated names.

Things get back to the normal – meaning new posts – on Monday, August 30.

Thanks for reading, and have a great week!

Sunday Summary: 8/8/10

It doesn’t matter if I’m at the dentist or the drugstore or Disney World, I’m always listening for names.

One of my favorites namespotting locations is Franklin’s, our local brewpub/restaurant/toy store – is there any better combination? – because, of course, we’re all chasing our children around while we wait for a table.  The other night, I heard a dad calling Raleigh – but wait, no – he was calling Rally.  After a few more rounds of “Rally, no you can’t have that fill-in-the-blank,” dad resorted to his son’s full name: Ralph.  I’ve always wanted to like Ralph, but between The Honeymooners and the lack of a nickname and my sense that I’m not cool enough to pronounce the name Rafe, well … all of a sudden, Rally rescued Ralph for me.

Here’s a debate that I’ve long since quit, but find fascinating nonetheless: a thread on Nameberry’s message boards devoted to LEGITIMATE Alternate Spellings – emphasis theirs.  Beyond the futility of telling people they can’t spell their daughter’s name Kaydence – because, really, they can and they do – I’m amazed at how much wrong information is out there.  A few I noticed:

  • Rachael was dubbed a hyperforeignism.  (That’s SAT-speak for attempting to apply the rules of one language to another and falling flat.)  I prefer Rachel, too, but Rachael has a long history of use, probably by parents familiar with the perfectly English spelling of Michael;
  • While some embraced Katharine, one dismissed her as nothing more than an imitation of Hepburn.  But that’s not so – plenty of Katharines pre-date the twentieth century, and in the nineteenth century she’s fairly common;
  • On Greer vs. Grier: “since it’s a surname, there can’t really be a legitimate spelling.”  Surnames have been subject to the same forces as given names – respellings, adaptations into other languages, inadvertent manglings, multiple spellings applied to the same person over the years.

Spellings matter.  Charlotte’s charm is sacrificed when she’s respelled Sharlytte, and I’m never sure is Mya sounds like Maya or Mia.  And I don’t know that there’s much point in taking a really popular choice like Madison and swapping out letters to arrive at Maddasynne.  But attempts to draw a hard bright line are futile.  Language is ever-changing, a rushing stream, and the more I learn about names, the more I’m convinced that they’re a slippery fish.  Which making writing naming rules something like trout fishing with your hands.

It also hits close to home – my cousin S. just welcomed a daughter named Alivia.  It wouldn’t be my choice, but she’s a much-loved addition to the family, and all of a sudden, I couldn’t care less if she were named Chardonnay.

Ahem.  I’m putting my soapbox away – promise – to look at what else was out there this week:

  • ForReal Baby Names spotted this one: Phantom Jack.  Usually I like an offbeat noun name, but Phantom seems sinister;
  • Here’s a second one from ForReal: For all of those newborns named just Alfie or Bess, this one surprised me: Elissia KathKate, sure.  Kathy, of course.  But Kath feels incomplete;
  • I loved this post at Swistle.  The parents of Oberon Elwood are looking for a name for their daughter on the way.  I loved their idea of Ursula, nicknamed Zuzu, but there were lots of great options suggested, like Thisbe;
  • You really should click through to this post at You Can’t Call It “It” just for the Mighty Mouse graphic.  Okay, and for the list of three-letter names for boys, of which there are more than you imagine.  Asa has recently become one of my favorites;
  • Here’s a great story from Nancy: the parents were rushing to the hospital, but baby #4 arrived en route, in the front seat of their Toyota Corolla.  Instead of Cecilia Violet, their daughter was named – wait for it – Cecilia Freeway.  Cecilia will never be able to give her full name without telling the story of her birth, but at least it is more subtle than naming her Corolla;
  • Nymbler’s July list is out: Lucy and Violet entered the Top Ten favorite names for the first time, and the five new search names were Annabeth, Adalaide, Arbor, Kensley, and Moxie.  It’s easy to see the appeal of the spelling Adalaide, and Arbor is a natural addition to Willow and River.  And I guess Penn Jillette gets the last laugh if Moxie becomes as common as, say, Sadie.

The big starbaby news was the birth of Amy Poehler and Will Arnett’s son Abel, a little brother for Archie, but there’s also:

That’s all for this week – as always, thank you so much for reading!

Sunday Summary: 6/13/10

So the Glee baby was named Beth. And Nikki Blonsky has a new series on ABC Family called Huge, apparently set at a summer weight-loss camp.  Her character’s name caught my eye: Willamina, though I believe she’ll be answering to Will.

In other, completely random news:

And then there’s the biggest discovery of the week: Nancy posted the Social Security Administration’s lists of Names outside the US Top 1000 that were given to 100 or more newborns in 2009.  You can check out the girls’ list here and the boys’ list here.  You’ll finds lots of variant spellings – Alexandrea, Jurnee, Olyvia and Kooper, Mykel, Trever - as well as some lovely surprises – Constance, Juniper, Honor and Thatcher, Perry, Gibson.  And were more than 100 little girls really called Halo?  And were the 177 baby boys called Major inspired by the Novogratz family?

Since the birth rate in Hollywood was a disappointing zero this week, I’ll leave you with Nameberry’s Will Maisie be the next Daisy? It’s a fascinating list, and it suggests why it is so very hard to find a name that is just a little bit different.

Have a great week, and, as always, thanks for reading!

Sunday Summary: 4/4/10

Happy Easter!  I’m organizing our neighborhood egg hunt today.  Somehow I’d lost count of how many kids have moved in/been born in recent weeks, and so I ended up filling 120 eggs last night.

Which is why this post is later than usual.  It’s also why I didn’t catch the fact that I’d set Hannelore to post on the wrong day.  Sorry ’bout that – she’ll be back as Baby Name of the Day tomorrow, 4/5.

In other, better organized corners of the blogosphere:

  • Elisabeth at You Can’t Call It “It” and Pam and Linda at Namberry offer up lists of names for children born on Easter.  Some true rarities appear on the two lists: Ostara, Lissa, Nicodemus.  But me?  If I actually gave birth to a daughter on the holiday itself, I think I might just name my little Cadbury bunny Easter;
  • Speaking of Nameberry’s Pam, did you catch her fabulous list of Top 50 Hot Names of the Future on The Daily Beast?  There he is, on the boys’ list – my beloved Huxley.  Plus Dante, Nico, Beau and Asa.  It’s official – I’m not nearly as original as I thought I was;
  • More proof!  Over at 7×7.com, an article on The Frisco Kid pegs Huxley as a liberal Mission District name, along with Calder and Coyote, while Cow Hollow – my youngest sister’s former stomping grounds – is home to kids called Boden, Webb and Grace;
  • CafeMom’s The Stir has Archie profiled as a Baby Name of the Day;
  • Over at Legit Baby Names, there’s the pretty Dainora, plus Nissan isn’t just an import.  He’s a Hebrew given name, too;
  • Laney Russell‘s mom wouldn’t be here if not for the two paramedics who saved her life – and inspired her name;
  • Names4Real spotted a newborn Coco Imogen in Australia. Is Imogene Coca unknown down under, or is little Coco in for a lifetime of wishing her parents had gone with Isobel or Evangeline;
  • Of course, Coco Imogen is nuthin’ compared to Tequila Marie, also via For Real. Pretty sound, yes.  And girls are called Brandy.  I once met an Amtrak bartender called Champagne.  (True story.)  While I don’t think unusual names are necessarily burdensome, I do think Tequila is … well, not the best choice;
  • ParentCentral Canada profiles a baby called Cedric Xavier – a name that seems weird to parents, to the post-Harry Potter generation will probably seem effortlessly cool;
  • Laura Wattenberg’s post on The New Belle Epoque was interesting – and she’s quite right.  I can imagine Elizabella catching on in a big way.  But Sarabella?  Maybe if she grows up to be a brain surgeon.

In all things related to the glamorous set:

In other news, a few days ago a blogger called Crystal wrote “It looks like the ‘hot’ baby names right now aren’t as Twilight-centric as they were last year (thank GOD, there is nothing creepier than naming your baby Esme, people).”  She’s not yet a mom herself, and that’s what interests me.

I don’t think there’s much connection between the rise of Esme and the Twilight novels.  And the rise of Esme is so far a quiet event – I know two, but both were inspired more by JD Salinger than Stephenie Meyer.  And both predate most of the Twilight hysteria.  So does Michael J. Fox and Tracey Pollan’s youngest daughter, Esme Annabelle, born in 2001.

As of 2008, Esme remains outside of the US Top 1000.  The average person might connect the vamp matriarch and your little girl, even if you were blissfully unaware of the story until after you’d signed the birth certificate.  Edward, on the other hand, could make a big jump thanks to the vampire of the moment.  But he’s such a classic that it probably won’t register for anyone outside of a few baby naming sites.

And that, dear readers, is why I’m so glad you’re here.  Have a fabulous week!

Sunday Summary: 3/14/10

First, please join me in wishing a fond au revoir to Bewildertrix!  With baby #3 on the way, she has decided to put Onomastitrix on hiatus.  (See?  That’s me feeling hopeful that she’ll be back someday.  Because no one does a round-up of BAs like Bewildertrix.)  She promises she’ll be around and will definitely come back and share her good news when baby makes five.

In local news, remember back when I mentioned my friend was in labor?  And hadn’t told me the gender or the name?  I spoke blogged too soon.  A few hours later, she was back at home, still pregnant.  More than a week (!) later, her darling daughter Caroline arrived.  The baby is beautiful, mom, dad and big brother Zachary are all doing well and Clio has someone to boss around right on her block – someday.  And the name!  What a great name.  (The middle is a distinctive family choice shared with her brother, so I won’t share.)

Elsewhere online:

In starbaby news, via E! Online and Celebrity Baby Blog:

  • Her name is Billie Beatrice – yup, the daughter of Eric Dane and Rebecca Gayheart has a name and it combines the boyish-nickname trend with the antique revival trend for an unexpected, but sweet choice;
  • Joseph Fiennes and wife have welcomed a daughter. Everyone is doing well, but as for a name?  They’re not telling;
  • This popped up at Perez Hilton, but I understand the original poll was on BabyCenter – apparently BC readers voted Sarah Michelle Gellar’s choice for her daughter’s name – Charlotte Grace – the very best of the best, followed by Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck’s Seraphina.

That’s all for this week.  As always, thanks for reading!

Sunday Summary: 1/3/10

It’s the first Sunday Summary of 2010.  Happy New Year!  Congratulations to Chanara and her family as they celebrate their first New Year’s Day with new daughter Rosemary Amelie Belle.

Now, on to the random name spotting:

  • Hat tip to Photoquilty for the heads up on Today’s story about bizarre baby names, including Marijuana Pepsi. Yes, really!  And she’s lovely, and nope, she doesn’t shorten it to Mari;
  • My neighbors have welcomed a daughter named Murielle!  They weren’t sharing pre-baby, but did say that they found the name on their family tree.  Can’t wait to learn more, but maybe I’d better stick with saying congratulations first;
  • One of Clio’s Christmas gifts was a Parents-branded ladybug popper thing-a-ma-jig.  Very cute.  The lagniappe was a toy catalog tucked inside, complete with cute kids identified by name.  The model kids were called the predictable Emma, Ava, Charlie and Brady, but there was also a Delana.  Is it a twist on Delaney?  Or a smoosh of Della and Anna?  I’m intrigued, and I can’t find it mentioned elsewhere;
  • Not only does Laura of Heavenly Homemakers make her own vanilla wafers, she named her four boys Asa, Justus, Elias and MalachiYes, it’s true.  If I follow a link to your blog to find a recipe, my second click is your “About” page to see if you share your kids’ names;
  • Bewildertrix spotted a Harryo Lucy, twin sister to Poppy Grace.  I’ve been thinking about Harryo ever since I watched The DuchessHarriet was her daughter’s name, but she answered to the nickname Harryo;
  • I’d never use it, but I love Richlinde, recently profiled over at Legit Baby Names;
  • While flipping through an old Martha Stewart Living, I spotted a sibset: sisters Io and Adda, and brother Ray.  I’m always impressed when parents manage to use short names and still make them distinctive;
  • Remember my How Close is Too Close post?  Discovery Health has a new show called Make Room for Multiples.  A couple named their triplets James, John and Jack – then welcomed twin boys called Jason and Jacob;
  • For Real spotted a Daphnee.  Is it a typo, or will an -ee spelling emerge as Daphne variant?  Should we be expecting to meet Daphni and Daphnie, too?

In year-in-review news:

A few starbabies arrived just before the clock struck twelve, including:

  • Black Crowes’ frontman Chris Robinson welcomed a daughter named Cheyenne Genevieve.  Chris is also dad to Ryder Russell with his ex, Kate Hudson.  Ryder and Cheyenne sound like siblings, but I’m surprised by the choice – Cheyenne is fading fast from her peak of #68 in 1997 and sounds rather uninspired for such a stylish dad;
  • Indy car driver Hélio Castroneves and girlfriend welcomed a daughter called Mikaella. Call me crazy, but I like the spelling.  I’m just weary of any -ayla sounding name;
  • Van Morrison is a dad – again – at the age of 64.  New baby is named George Ivan Morrison III.  (Hmmm … can’t confirm this on his website, and the original link is gone.  Am I imagining things?  See the comment below – thanks, Joyce!  The birth announcement was a hoax, but hey, Van as a nickname from George Ivan is still pretty cool.)

There’s an interesting article on double naming quoted at the Omaha World-Herald.  You’ll note that she’s mostly talking about English and French practices.  In the US, you can give a child a compound name, but unless you smoosh it together, Ava-Leigh is usually recorded as Ava L., not Avaleigh.  NOTE:  Please see Meredith Cane’s comment below.  She is, indeed, the expert quoted on double names.  But Cleveland Kent Evans wrote the article, and his research incorporates more than just Ms. Cane’s observations.  And 48 variant spellings for Lily-Mae is something else!

That’s all for this week.  Many thanks for reading!