Baby Name of the Day: Cymbeline

Cunobelin

Coins of Cunobelenus; Image via Wikipedia

He’s a literary king with a pretty, pretty name.

Thanks to Lucy for suggesting Cymbeline as our Baby Name of the Day.

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Is C the new K?

latin letter "c"

Image via Wikipedia

Even if you’re not even a teensy, eensy bit interested in the royal wedding, it would be pretty tough to avoid the topic today.  William and Kate’s wedding is an all-out media frenzy.

Chatter about royal baby names has been non-stop since the engagement was announced, and I’ve very much enjoyed dreaming up possible names for a future heir to the throne.

But here’s the big baby naming question that I’m wondering about: when commoner Kate becomes regal Catherine, will C become the new K?

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Sunday Summary: 5/16/10

Conventional media is still abuzz with news that Jacob and Isabella are the most popular baby names in the US for 2009.  Yawn. Luckily, the baby name blogosphere has moved on to more interesting topics.  Here are my two Big Questions of the week:

And, of course, Time Magazine pondered Why Do Babies Have the Same Names? They called it “The Twilight Effect.”  Is it me, or did they completely miss an important point?  Sure, lots of us are naming our kids Jacob and Isabella and Emma and Ethan.  But, generation after generation, we’ve become more tolerant of diversity in baby names.  Maybe my perspective is skewed by living in a big urban area with a huge international population, but I’m most impressed by how few kids continue to receive the most common names.

In good ol’ fashioned name-spotting this week:

And Claudia Schiffer has a new daughter, but if Caspar and Clementine’s little sis has a name, they’ve yet to share.  The supermodel mentioned she was struggling with name choices, so it is possible they’re still debating.  My money is on Cordelia, but I bet she’ll surprise us all.

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

Name of the Day: Cady

Today’s name is either an interesting surname choice, or another morph of the super-trendy monolithic girls name MaKaylalyencelee.

Cady caught our eye a zillion years ago as the maiden name of abolitionist and suffragette Elizabeth Cady Stanton.  She died before women were granted the vote – and long before women were viable candidates for the Presidency of the United States.  But her work for racial and gender equity, and for human rights, broadly defined, lives on.

But would her name wear well on a girl today?

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