Sunday Summary: 6/5/11

Clock number 5

Image by Leo Reynolds via Flickr

We live in a magical age.  Earlier this week I spotted an unusual name scrolling across Nameberry’s “currently being viewed” ticker, and mentioned it on my Facebook page, with a link to the entry.  Within minutes Elixyvett appeared in their Most Popular Names cloud, and stayed there for a few days, prompting a thread on their message board.  At the same time, Nameberry’s Pam sourced an entire post on Old People Names from a Twitter craze.

Saints and royalty and popular legends and music and novels and television and movies have all put new names on the map.  Surely social media will function in a similar fashion.  But will there be, say, a baby name Elixyvett because a mom-to-be spotted the name when it loomed large in the tag cloud?  Will someone’s Twitter handle inspire a future baby name?

Elsewhere online:

Spotted amongst the glitterati:

  • Pink’s daughter arrived, and she’s named the rather reasonable Willow Sage, a flower child for the tough chick.  My favorite headline has to be this one, from Holy Moly: Pink has baby girl, names her after shrubbery;
  • Actress Dorian Brown welcomed a son, Cayman Tyson Pham.  No word on the parents’ inspiration for the choice.  Brown is set to appear in the American remake of quirky Australian TV series Wilfred.  I’d give Cayman and Wilfred equal odds of catching on;
  • I’m enjoying learning more about Australian celebs thanks to Waltzing – this week alone brought us a baby girl called Allegra Eve and a boy named Lux Edward.  Lux joins a big sister called Autumn Claire.  I came across a boy named Lux years ago and had a hard time thinking of it as masculine, probably thanks to Lux Lisbon in Jeffrey Eugenides’ The Virgin Suicides.  But he really could fit right in with Luke, Max, and Gus, couldn’t he?

I’ve gone out on a limb and waded into deep water for this week’s Nameberry post.  I think it is one of my wackier, less wearable lists – but also a trend that seems to be catching on.  Last week’s post was Surfer Names, a list I ended up really loving.

That’s all for this week.  As always, thanks for reading and have a great week!

Sunday Summary: 8/29/10

My week at the beach was spent listening for names (well, there was ice cream and sand and a giant waterslide called the Hippo) but I didn’t hear much.  There was a Veronica nicknamed Vera, but mostly it was the pleasant Top 100 assortment of Ethan, Dylan, Emma, Riley, Noah, Chloe, Caleb, Jackson, Zachary, Ellie, and the like.  I also heard a girl called Cooper and another girl named Gracen or Graycen or maybe Gracyn.  Thanks for checking out Rerun Week while I was slathering on sunscreen!

In the meantime, a new neighbor has arrived and her kids names?  Be still my heart: Nella and Arlo.  I haven’t actually met them (she joined a listserv for local moms) but I might hug her.

Also in the real world, the incredibly talented Brooke at Dinkypopsnomore is now mom to two!  The incredibly photogenic, more-stylish-at-3-than-I-am-at-37 Temperance is big sister to Verity BlytheSee the post about her name here.

Elsewhere online:

In starbaby news:

  • Let’s hear it for the double palindrome power of Ava Katherine Otto, a new daughter for country singer James Otto and wife Amy;
  • Actor Matt Walton – he plays Eli on One Life To Live – has an Ava, too, plus a brand new son called Greyson James.  Greyson is the new Jayden. Add up all the boys called Greyson and Grayson, plus the girls wearing a variant of sound-alike Gracen, and you have the formula for a gender-neutral, hard-to-gauge usage name that every parent thinks is uncommon.  Too bad, because I do love Gray;
  • Army Wives’ Catherine Bell has a new son called Ronan, a little sister for Gemma.  That’s a nice sibset, a pair of names that are underused, but not outlandish;
  • And the big news is the birth of Florence Rose Endellion, a daughter for UK Prime Minister David Cameron, his wife Samantha, and three older siblings: the late Ivan, plus Nancy, and Arthur Elwen.  For a humorous and insightful look on place names popping up on birth certificates, there’s this News & Star column. Capri and Dublin, yes.  St. Bees Flimby Pie?  Probably not;
  • Lastly, the best use of Twitter for baby naming since Erykah Badu live-tweeted the birth of her third child and claimed she was calling her Twittymilk surely goes to Neil Patrick Harris’ twins teaser. That’s an instant sibset I can’t wait to learn.

As always, thanks for reading!

Sunday Summary: 8/30/09

It’s been a quiet week here at AppMtn as we all enjoy the last sweltering days of summer.  The stores are filling up with sweaters (and Halloween candy – already!) and television is premiering brand new can’t-miss-shows.

Which brings me to a trio of Project Runway related thoughts:

  • Contestant Qristyl squeaked by for another week.  With every second she spends on the small screen, I expect another mom-to-be to consider swapping out her kreativ K for a qreat’yff Q.  Bring on Qaden, Qonor, Qaylee and Qadynz – Shudder;
  • Then there’s the talented Shirin, who told us in her intro that her name means sweet in Farsi.  There’s also an appealing legend about a seventh-century Persian Queen by the same name;
  • She’s not showing on this season (yet) but Heidi Klum says that she has no name picked out for her fourth starbaby, little sister to Leni, Henry and Johan.  In an interview with USA Today, Klum says she and Seal are “waiting for the lightbulb to come on” this time.

Off the Runway:

On a more scholarly note:

  • A new article from Ancestry.com reports that 49% of all Americans are named after a family member;
  • Then there’s the Menachem Mystery on Baby Name Wizard. First, I’ll admit I didn’t realize that the US Top 1000 stats were revised.  But Laura Wattenberg spotted one more unusual quirk in the latest revision – Menachem appeared in the rankings, when he hadn’t appeared in the prior list.  And this had happened year after year.  In fact, a number of names popular among Orthodox Jews tend to rise during the revisions.  There’s much conversation about why that might be in the comments, but here’s my second thing-I-didn’t-know.  Can you actually leave the hospital in the US without naming your baby?  I had no idea.

That’s all for now – thanks for reading!

Sunday Summary: 5/3/09

If there were any doubt that I’m deeply shallow, here’s a random thought that crossed my mind as I was monitoring the swine flu outbreak for my day job:  Hmmm … wonder if this will hurt Olivia’s standing in the rankings when the 2010 stats come out?

 

  • While I’m still on my wildly inappropriate streak, here’s a list of famous pigs compiled by a porcine booster in the UK.  I suppose Petunia and Noelle might also take a hit;
  • And one more – I’ve often enjoyed some of the names from Ian Falconer’s Olivia books.  Besides her brothers Ian and William, her family has a dog named Perry and a cat called Edwin.  Friends include Francine and Julian.  Ever since Peregrine was Name of the Day, Perry has really been growing on me;
  • Here’s a question that plagues me:  when does a name become a name?  I thought Rielle was a one-off appellation best thought of Franglais for “this generation’s Donna Rice.”  But a Canadian couple quoted in the Toronto Star’s column  chose it for their daughter.  And wow, is their kid cute!  The proud parents landed on the name after watching a documentary about female Canadian fighter pilots – including one named Riel.  I still wasn’t sold until the mom mentioned that, when reversed, the name becomes elle rit – she laughs – en français.  Which I’ll admit, has some appeal;
  • Speaking of games to play with names, I keep forgetting to ask:  after the Astrid Name of the Day post, Emmy Jo and Photoquilty weighed in on the proper term for the type of mistake discussed in the post.  (Astrid was famously misinterpreted as Astird on TV’s The Office.)  Besides running through all the available terms and coming up short, I found myself wondering if any terms (malapropism, eggcorn) are ever properly applied to personal names.  If you know, please leave a comment!
  • Elisabeth at You Can’t Call It “It” did a great post on The Sweet Spot – you know, names that are fashionable without being trendy, familiar without being common?  It’s a great article, and I’m over the moon that she included my screen name, Verity;
  • A few starbabies to report:  CBS’ Worst Week star Erinn Hayes welcomed a daughter named Lilah Grace;
  • Boston Bruins’ captain Zdeno Chara welcomed a daughter called Elliz Victoria.  He and his wife are Slovak, but I couldn’t puzzle out if Elliz is related to Elizabeth or Alice;
  • Speaking of Alice, Patton Oswalt – Remy from Ratatouille – welcomed a daughter named Alice;
  • Over at Nameberry, there’s a fun post on Gone with the Wind names – besides spotting Eulalie on the list (I had forgotten, too, Lola!) I was pleased to see Clark Gable making another appearance.

 

That’s all the name news for the moment.  And despite my fanciful reaction to the flu epidemic, I really am hoping that you and yours stay safe.