Thursday, March 06, 2008

Baby Names have Got Weird!

I have always been abit intrigued with how parents choose a name for their baby. I reckon it's a difficult decision. Parents sometimes want a unique name, one they think their kid will have sole rights to, so that they do not become a Tom, Dick, or Harry.

But an increasing trend among parents to change 1, 2 or more letters in traditional names so that they are spelt differently is one I don't subscribe to. Why spell Alexander 'Alex-Zander'? I'm not sure it adds anything to the name. It just makes the parents seem like bad spellers.

A worse trend (not mentioned in the article below) is where parents choose not to have any vowels for their kid's name. So, for example, they may have a name, hzydn, which they choose to pronounce 'hayden'. If you can take the trouble to wrench those vowels out, then I think those parents should take the trouble to twist their tongue and pronounce the name as it reads.

I know this rant might just come back and bite me in the b*m, but for now, I'll keep my favourite kids' names close to my chest.



Roze by any name would spell as sweet

THE phonetic spelling popular in text messaging and emails has been blamed for degrading the English language.

Now it's being fingered for a trend in unconventionally spelt baby names.

Parents are shunning traditional spellings for versions such as Alex-Zander, Cam'ron, Emma-Lee, Ozkah, Thaillah and Ameleiyah.

Analysing Australian births in 2007, social analyst Mark McCrindle found the name Jayden was registered spelt 12 ways, Aidan nine ways, and Amelia and Tahlia eight ways.

Lachlan had five other versions - Lochlyn, Lochlin, Lochlen, Lochlain and Lauchlan.

"The use of a 'y' instead of an 'i' has hit epidemic proportions, as has the use of 'k' over 'c' like in the names Jaykob and Lynkon, double letters like Siimon and Chriss and hyphens like Emma-Lee," said Mr McCrindle, of private research agency McCrindle Research.

The trend was due to the phonetic spelling in email and text messaging and to parents wanting their children to stand out, he said.

"Gen X parents were the first generation to grow up themselves with mum not staying home with the kids or their parents divorcing, and they hated their parents not being around to show them love.

"Knowing they will probably recreate some of those sins, they now are naming their kids uniquely to show how individual and special they are to them.

"There is also a bit of backlash against the conservative names like Jack, Ella and Olivia."

Jacquelene and Ashley Wilkinson named their daughters Briarna, born on February 15, and Maddisen, 16 months, in the hope of influencing their nicknames.

"We wanted conservative, girly names for our children. I don't like some of the more out-there names people are giving their kids," Ms Wilkinson, from Bulleen said.

"We liked the sound of the name Brianna, but I didn't want her be an 'Anna' because we like the nickname 'Bree', so we decided on Briarna."

Ms Wilkinson had wanted to call her first daughter Madison, but a friend wasn't so sure.

"She said, 'God I hate names that rhyme. They must get so teased at school' off-handedly once and I thought, 'Oh no, what am I doing with Madison Wilkinson?' " she said.

"But I've loved the name forever and didn't want to give it up, so my husband and I were on the internet one night and saw the spelling Maddisen, and knew that was it."

Source: Herald Sun, March 6, 08

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

who knows, in 10years time, if you name your kid, tom dick and harry, they may be the only one with that name! what is in a name? i have a friend who wanted to name is son Z. yes, the letter Z! i felt like S, yes, Smack his head off. In man's folly, there is always a wise wife (like Nabal and Abigail, 1sam25),she managed to change it to Zach instead of Z. so if you name your daughter Abigail, she might be wise and smart, but she may also likely married a foolish man like Nabal? hm, i think it sound be something that is easy and meaningful to the couple. my other friend named their daughter Faith, so common right? but due to some complication during her pregrance, the doctor said, the will never live on n they shd abort her. They prayed to God and in time, the girl was born normal, she is 7 now. Faith then made sense to them! My daughter? Kay means happy, zia means light. we like her to be happy in the Light(jesus, john1:9). Kieran? it means dark and handsome.(he is handsome when in the dark!, cant see) we just like the name, the sound. and it starts with K. cant call him kapo or kiakia right? if we have a third one, maybe kayden? why kayden? dunno, saw hayden in your article mah, just change the h to k loh. easy.


frank foo

Tora said...

heehee...you're right about tom, dick and harry being the unusual names in future. But as for Faith being a common name, is it? My future sis-in-law's name is faith, and my mum says, we have faith now, we need love and peace and hope....heehee!

Kayden? Is it a new name you created by replacing 'H' in Hayden with 'K'? Erm....how about Kiefer, Kaiser, Kaia, Kaleb, Karen, Karena, Karin Kara.... =O)

My future kid name? Maybe Bruce Lee Brown....hahahahaha!