Starbaby News: Welcome Hattie Margaret!

Tori Spelling is now a mom to three!  Daughter Hattie Margaret joins big sister Stella Doreen and big brother Liam Aaron, as well as Dean’s son, Jack.

I would never have guessed this one for the reality television couple, but it fits – Jack, Liam, Stella, and Hattie.  She’s also on trend with names like Sadie, as well as the British tendency to elevate short forms to formal name status.

I’m a big fan of Harriet, and I think she’s catching on, along with other ends-in-et options like Juliet.  Hattie is also the name of one of the newborns profiled in 2010 documentary Babies.

Spelling and McDermott had been choosing names that followed trends.  This time I think the couple may be setting them.

Baby Name of the Day: Indie

INDIE

INDIE by marksdk via Flickr

It’s a versatile nickname, likely to bring to mind a fictional daredevil archeologist.

Thanks to Carrie for suggesting her daughter Ingrid’s nickname.  Our Baby Name of the Day is Indie.

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Sunday Summary: 3/6/11

Nature's Number 6

Nature's Number 6 by CarbonNYC via Flickr

First, a question for a friend: let’s say you were expecting a daughter.  Not only is she going to be your last child, you’re the youngest sibling, so this baby is probably the last in her generation.  You’d love to pass on your maiden name.  Trouble is, your maiden name sounds exactly like a popular name, but with a totally different spelling.

For argument’s sake, let’s say the name is Reily.  It looks like a creative respelling of a popular name, but it isn’t – it’s the most meaningful name you can imagine.  You could respell it to Riley.  But you’d rather not.

What would you do?  Use Reily, knowing there’s no name more meaningful?  Accept the less meaningful Riley in an attempt to save your daughter spelling hassles?  Or are there so many girls called Rylee that you have to spell everything anyhow?

Opinions appreciated!

Elsewhere online:

  • I’ve been thoroughly enjoying Harry’s Law, the new Kathy Bates show on NBC.  The character’s name is Harriet, one of my favorites.  Harriet left the US Top 1000 after 1970, and since then the only high-profile bearer of the name was the shrewish Mrs. Oleson on Little House on the Prairie.  I keep expecting to see her make a comeback.  Nickname option Hattie seems like a logical successor to Maddie and Abby;
  • This post at Swistle discusses the name Hazen, for a boy.  For the parents, it’s the name of a favorite place, a state park in Vermont.  But it also sounds like the kind of invented boy name we continue to hear.  A friend of mine mentioned she knows a newborn boy named Vallen;
  • You Can’t Call It “It” skims the London Telegraph birth announcements. It’s always a great read, but my favorite was Hero Genevieve Tallulah, a sister for Gus, Daisy, Archie, and Conrad.  I’d love to know the older kids’ full names;
  • Look at this middle name, spotted by For Real: Roman Starling.  It’s a great combination of the very masculine and the completely unexpected;
  • I try to read Voornamelijk, despite the fact that it is in Dutch.  Her recent report on reality TV from Europe turned up an intriguing list of contestants: Dilara, Lois, Meron, and Zira;
  • Word is out that the most popular names in Germany for last year were Sophie and Maximilian.  Despite being known for their restrictive laws regarding given names, quite a few unusual choices made it through, including Kix and Belana;
  • I love this story about a baby named after chorus girl Evelyn Nesbit at Nancy’s site.

I am absolutely bursting with excitement over my post at Nameberry for Monday.  The names range from Amoret to Sedley, Lucien to Arthemise.

Hollywood gave us just two announcements this week, but oh, what names!

Which reminds me – do you know the most popular season name?  This article at Babble reads “We all know at least one Summer, right? And Autumn isn’t unheard of. But Winter? That’s a first.”  Actually, Autumn is in the US Top 100, while Summer has never ranked that high.  And can Winter really be called a first when Nicole Richie’s Harlow Winter Kate is so visible?  Nancy tells us that 259 girls received the name in 2009, meaning that Winter ranked just a few spots beyond the Top 1000.

As for Spring, there’s always Oscar-nominated actress Spring Byington.

Speaking of spring, remember that voting for March Madness preliminaries for both Boys and Girls is open until Friday morning.

Thanks all for this week.  As always, thanks for reading!

Baby Name of the Day: Beulah

B

Letter B by psd via Flickr

Quick: name a name you’d never give to a child.  GertrudeEthel?  Today’s choice often makes that list, but it wasn’t always so.

Thanks to Emily G. for suggesting one from her family tree.  Our Baby Name of the Day is Beulah.

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Sunday Summary: 5/2/10

Congratulations go out to Rocking Fetal.  She’s welcomed her new daughter, Willa Florence Mae, a little sister for Lucas and Ezra.  What a fabulous sibset!

Also, congrats to one of my oldest friends on the birth of his daughter, Helen Claire.  I once described Helen as dusty, and I completely take it back.

In other news:

The big news was, of course, Oscar-winning actress Sandra Bullock’s solo – and surprisingly secret – adoption of Louis Bardo.  Elsewhere among the famous:

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

Name of the Day: Harriet

She was the prissy mom to mean girl Nellie on Little House in the 70s, but today she could make a great name for a daughter

Thanks to Sarah for suggesting Harriet as Name of the Day.

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Sunday Summary: 1/31/10

Let’s start off our Sunday with some controversy.  The NameLady recently answered a reader’s question:  Are there rules for nicknames?  

Her answer was basically yes.  Julia can be Julie and David Dave, but take it much farther you really should just put the nickname on the birth certificate.  (In this case, she advised her reader to put Catie on the birth certificate.)

I disagree.  And I said so.

Much to my delight, other readers come out strongly in favor of nicknames, too.

In other, (mostly) non-ranting news:

In celeb-spotting, all via Celebrity Baby Blog:

  • The big news was the birth of Axel Ferrell.  I realize it is absolutely none of my business, but I always wonder when a middle name isn’t released – are Will and Viveca not into them?  Or just not sharing;
  • Ditto Emily Mortimer’s new darling daughter, May.   A sweet, simple name, but is that it?  Big brother is Samuel John;
  • Desperate Housewives alum Neal McDonough and wife Ruvé are parents for the third time.  Daughter London Jane joins sibs Morgan Patrick and Catherine Maggie.  I loved Neal as the Tin Man in Syfy’s reboot of the Wizard of Oz, so I’ll give him a pass on that inconsistent naming style.

Lastly, I keep meaning to share this snippet of conversation I had with two colleagues, after one had went to visit a friend’s new baby:

V:   What did they name him?
E:   Bryce.
V:  Now that’s a buppy name!
E:  Bryce Roosevelt.
V:  Roosevelt?  That’s old school buppy!

You might note that I am uncharacteristically speechless throughout this exchange.

Buppy = Black Urban Professional, and up until that moment, I was completely unaware that such a category of monikers existed.  (Though if I had thought about it for a second, I guess I’d have imagined it would.)  When I pressed my colleague for a list of buppy names, she shrugged.  Clearly this was not as interesting to her, though she did concede that Morgan is the default buppy choice for a daughter.

So I’m dying to know more about buppy names, but I don’t think I can ask E. anymore without risking her ire.  (And she orders the cookies for meetings, so I don’t dare.)  If anyone stumbles across a list, please share.

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

Sadie’s Sisters

I’ll admit it.  I would never, in a month of Sundays, put Sadie on my daughter’s birth certificate.  It would be Sarah, thanks very much, just in case she grows up to run for office or take up brain surgery or otherwise wants to sound like a mature, serious adult.

I’m not necessarily in the majority.  And I’m not necessarily right, either.  Plenty of women named Julie and Jodie have turned out just fine.  And plenty of Sarah/Sadies are irritated at having to constantly explain that yes, Sadie is a nickname for Sarah.

So for your consideration, I’ve pulled together a list of ends-in-ie-names just might stand on their own.

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