By Clare Green
This week’s news includes super short baby names, football and hockey namesakes, Indigenous Canadian names, and British trends over the last 180 years.
I’d love to know if there’s a story behind Perstephanie, or if it’s a case of broken telephone. In a survey of what Australian parents are planning to name their 2019 babies, most of the answers are lovely but not surprising, like Finley, Sebastian, Ariana and Willow. But this mashup stands out.
Don’t forget your fellow Nameberry readers’ stories, too: there are lots of good ones in the latest birth announcements.
Case in point to show that short names are going nowhere: TV chef Donatella Arpaia just used two of the most popular ones for her twins, Noah Christian and Emma Mariella. The longer middle names make a neat balance.
We’re not quite at the same level as the Netherlands, though. The Dutch charts really are dominated by short names like Finn, Bram, Tess and Mila. Three quarters of the names in their boys’ and girls’ Top 10 have only 3 or 4 letters.
Many short names started out as nicknames. One way to choose a name is to start with the nickname you want and work backwards, like these parents. One family wanted a girl called Isa, and chose Luisa as her formal name; another loved Ike, and made it short for Leon Isaac. But I can’t help feeling a little sad that one mother bypassed a name she loved for her son, Rahm, because she didn’t want people to call him Rahmy. She went with Remy instead.
Want more nickname inspiration? Try this list of German nicknames that, according to the author, are even better than the long form. There are some you might not have heard of, like Lini, Lissi, Matze and Joschi.
To me, that’s not the most exciting part of the story – although it is interesting to have it confirmed that, just like in the States, the proportion of children with the top names has fallen and the name pool has grown.
The exciting bit is this tool. It shows broad name trends from a large sample of birth records in Britain from 1938 to 2016, including the influence of royalty and early film stars. Type in any name and it will show you a graph. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ll be busy for the next five hours…
Meanwhile in the hockey world, one Washington Capitals fan gave her son the middle name Stanley to commemorate the team winning the Stanley Cup this year.
In this essay, she explains why she gave her daughters the Cree names sâkowêw (meaning “s/he makes a joyful sound”, or “war whoops”) and wâpanacâhkos (“dawn star” or Venus). There are no typos there (I’ve triple-checked): the Cree writing system doesn’t use capital letters.
Vowel calls using these names “a powerful act of reclamation” for Cree language and identity, against a history of having these taken away. So far, she’s found that people’s reaction to the names is usually confusion, followed by conversation and honest attempts to pronounce them correctly.
Kenya Moore continued the place name theme for another generation. Her new daughter, Brooklyn Doris, is named after the place where Moore met her husband, and after her grandmother who raised her. Doris was a Top 10 name from 1924 to 1933 in the US (and even longer in the UK). Will her time ever come again?
British actress Jennie McAlpine, of the soap opera Coronation Street, has welcomed baby Hilda. The name pays tribute to a long-running character on the show as well as being one she likes – just as with her son’s name, Albert. One can only hope that this is the start of a Hilda revival.
How about you: which old lady name(s) would you like to see come back?