This week’s news includes names from books and technology, babies named after hospitals, and baby name trends in Ireland and the Isle of Man.
Now that virtual assistants like Alexa, Siri and Cortana have been around for a few years, we’re starting to see a common trend in the popularity of their names for children. All three names rose in the charts in the year they were released, but then fell in the following years – dramatically, in the case of Alexa.
(Incidentally, have you seen the video of a baby who ignores her mother saying her name, but looks up when she hears “Alexa”? Maybe she thinks Alexa is her name, but my theory is that she knows that fun things happen when her parents say Alexa, like music magically starting.)
It’s interesting that Samsung chose a name for their assistant – Bixby – that sounds namelike and has trendy sounds, but has barely been used for babies. It’s too early to say how that will play out in baby names, but it’s one to keep an eye on in next year’s stats.
In other news from the charts, if you love a good infographic, check out this moving chart of the Top 10 names in New Jersey changing over the last 50 years. As it gets towards the end, it shows just how changeable the top names have suddenly become in recent years.
At the longer end of the scale, Zak Williams, the son of the late great Robin Williams, has named his son McLaurin Clement. That unusual first name was Robin’s middle name – but the new baby will be known as Mickey. It’s a perfect example of a popular nickname for an uncommon name, which we know lots of Berries love both in theory and in practice. What else could Mickey be short for?
Hopping across the sea to Ireland: if you like Irish names (which is, er, quite a lot of us) check out the latest episode of the podcast Motherfoclóir. Don’t worry, it’s in English. The topic of the week is Irish names, including traditions, changing fashions, silent letters, and why English speakers are so scared of Irish names. By coincidence, some of the names they mention also popped up in a new YouTube video this week, like Tadhg, Colm and Orlaith.
In Scotland’s Orkney islands, the first baby to be born in the new Balfour Hospital was named…Balfour. It’s a Gaelic placename-turned-surname, meaning “pasture settlement”, and it belonged to the hospital’s first patron. It’s a one-of-a-kind name, and wasn’t registered at all in Scotland (or the US, for that matter) last year.
Meanwhile in Israel, baby girl Hadassah–Esther was born in the Hadassah Medical Center, helped by a midwife named Estee. If you’ve studied your baby name books carefully, you might know that Hadassah is another name for the biblical queen Esther, making it a bit like naming your child Simon–Peter or – to use a modern queen of sorts – Beyoncé-Sasha.
Of course, if you name your child after a character before their story has ended, there’s always an element of risk. In this article, a father defends his decision to name his daughter Khaleesi before the character took a turn for the worse in the last season of Game of Thrones. That condemned one of the most popular Game of Thrones names to baby name purgatory.
Speaking of dragons, if your literary tastes lean more towards the middle ages, this list of names from medieval literature includes lesser-known gems like Emaré and Cador.