This week’s name news includes baby name trends, some stunning “sweet spot” celebrity baby names, the thorny issue of baby name theft, and a celebration of unique baby names of all shapes, sizes and sources.
Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds are now parents of three! Just as with their older children, daughters James (4) and Inez (3), the proud parents aren’t releasing any more details about the new arrival just yet — although a Twitter post in which Reynolds refers to his “daughters” has fans convinced it’s a third girl for the couple.
While we impatiently await an official name announcement, here’s what the wonderful Sophie, our resident Name Guru to the Stars, predicted for them. Wouldn’t another -s/z ending name, like Hollis, Mavis or Beatriz, be fun? What’s your money on?
Australian beauty queen and TV presenter Jennifer Hawkins welcomed her first daughter Frankie Violet, actress Keira Knightley and her husband James Righton chose the delightful Delilah for their second baby girl (a sister for Edie), and Troian Bellisario finally revealed the glorious name she gave to her now-one-year-old daughter: Aurora.
And on the boys’ side, Duck Dynasty stars John Luke and Mary Kate Robertson announced that they’d chosen the sweet and solid John Shepherd for their firstborn son, who will go by his full double name like his parents.
Congratulations all round!
In fact, both names are trending in a big way right now: Wolf is in the Top 600 most searched boys’ names on Nameberry this year, and Charlie is in the Top 50! Still, intentional or not, anyone who’s ever had their carefully chosen baby name “stolen” will understand Zooey’s irritation.
Baby name theft is always a hot topic in our Forums — what’s your take? Have you ever experienced anything similar?
Case in point: a baby boy in Australia named Citizen Sage, which — apart from some potentially thorny legal wrangling — really doesn’t feel all that out there in 2019, especially beside brothers Atlas and Everest, and sister Zephyr.
The drive for originality exists in other languages, too. This French article — with a title to make any French-speaking name nerd’s day! — focuses on invented names: borrowed from famous brands or figures (Louboutin, Batman, Alkapone — say it aloud); created by combining other names or words (Kylienzo, Merci Mireille, Lumière Frida); or by respelling more traditional options (Khamylle, Robaire, Ozyrys). And in France, illegal baby names are actually a thing.
According to French sociologist Baptiste Coulmont, the function of the first name has changed since the First World War: first names are now used much more widely, even in formal contexts, and serve to identify individuals in a way that surnames did previously. And many parents have other, more personal reasons for wanting a truly one-of-a-kind name for their child: like Alison, who chose an unconventional spelling for her son’s name (Oween) “to mark him out as unique, as he is in my eyes”.
Take this couple, also in France, whose two-year legal battle to be allowed to use a diacritic on their son’s birth certificate finally ended in victory this week. The name in question? Fañch, a traditional choice in the Breton language of north-western France, which is in steep decline today.
Accepting names like Fañch — or like the Chinese Ma Yun or the Japanese Atsushi, rather than Americanized versions like Jack Ma or Sushi — isn’t about aesthetics, it’s about equality and respect.
Post-Thunberg, his Greta-hating daughter can be found at youth climate demonstrations, brandishing a large placard with the slogan… You guessed it!