Top 100 Baby names of 2008
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Our five month old is Samuel Gerald Gray. Samuel because we both liked it, it's a "normal" name and it's a good Jewish name (his mother is Jewish). Gerald was my fathers name. My pet hate at the moment is the 8 Harrisons under two years old we know
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Our five month old is Samuel Gerald Gray. Samuel because we both liked it, it's a "normal" name and it's a good Jewish name (his mother is Jewish). Gerald was my fathers name. My pet hate at the moment is the 8 Harrisons under two years old we know
So, a bit like me then - Cultural and ancestral reasons.
Josh Gray wrote:
My pet hate at the moment is the 8 Harrisons under two years old
Do the parents of these children know each other, or is that just a coincidence? But 8 Harrisons! Wow!
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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So, a bit like me then - Cultural and ancestral reasons.
Josh Gray wrote:
My pet hate at the moment is the 8 Harrisons under two years old
Do the parents of these children know each other, or is that just a coincidence? But 8 Harrisons! Wow!
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
Do the parents of these children know each other, or is that just a coincidence? But 8 Harrisons! Wow!
Some do, most dont. Between friends, family, work, mothers groups etc we know a lot of people with young kids. It's just the current fad here. Those of us that grew up with Star Wars and Indiana Jones are now of child bearing age
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
Do the parents of these children know each other, or is that just a coincidence? But 8 Harrisons! Wow!
Some do, most dont. Between friends, family, work, mothers groups etc we know a lot of people with young kids. It's just the current fad here. Those of us that grew up with Star Wars and Indiana Jones are now of child bearing age
Josh Gray wrote:
Those of us that grew up with Star Wars and Indiana Jones are now of child bearing age
That's actually a scary thought... Wait, I grew up with that stuff!! I wonder how long before we start see Harry and Hermione push up the charts.
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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Josh Gray wrote:
Those of us that grew up with Star Wars and Indiana Jones are now of child bearing age
That's actually a scary thought... Wait, I grew up with that stuff!! I wonder how long before we start see Harry and Hermione push up the charts.
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
I wonder how long before we start see Harry and Hermione push up the charts.
Just as long as it's not Paris and Brittany :)
Josh Gray wrote:
Just as long as it's not Paris and Brittany
When there is nothing else to say there is always *facepalm* Actually, my cousin named her daughter "Son of Kenneth" - Well, not really, but that is the translation of MacKenzie which is what she actually named her daughter. Personally, I thought that was a bit stupid, especially as she has Gaelic speakers in her family who thought it was a bit of an odd thing to do.
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
I was surprised when a few years ago a friend of mine named her baby "Emma" because it seemed old-fashioned and I am a huge Jane Austen fan. Then I found out it's been very popular over the last few years. If I had a baby I would name it 'Adoption.'
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
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I was surprised when a few years ago a friend of mine named her baby "Emma" because it seemed old-fashioned and I am a huge Jane Austen fan. Then I found out it's been very popular over the last few years. If I had a baby I would name it 'Adoption.'
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
leckey wrote:
If I had a baby I would name it 'Adoption.'
Any particular reason for that?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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leckey wrote:
If I had a baby I would name it 'Adoption.'
Any particular reason for that?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
My name has never made the list.
Need software developed? Offering C# development all over the United States, ERL GLOBAL, Inc is the only call you will have to make.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest Hemingway
Most of this sig is for Google, not ego. -
Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
I named my son (now 18) Thomas Benton because that was my Grandfather's first and middle names.
WE ARE DYSLEXIC OF BORG. Refutance is systile. Your a$$ will be laminated.
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
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My name has never made the list.
Need software developed? Offering C# development all over the United States, ERL GLOBAL, Inc is the only call you will have to make.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. -- Ernest Hemingway
Most of this sig is for Google, not ego.I think the only other person named "Ennis" I have ever seen was Bill Cosby's son. :~
WE ARE DYSLEXIC OF BORG. Refutance is systile. Your a$$ will be laminated.
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
20 bucks says Jack Bauer is the #1 reason.
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Josh Gray wrote:
Just as long as it's not Paris and Brittany
When there is nothing else to say there is always *facepalm* Actually, my cousin named her daughter "Son of Kenneth" - Well, not really, but that is the translation of MacKenzie which is what she actually named her daughter. Personally, I thought that was a bit stupid, especially as she has Gaelic speakers in her family who thought it was a bit of an odd thing to do.
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
It's very odd if your cousin's partner name is not Kenneth ;)
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
Almost all Arab names have a meaning to them. My own (second half of my first) name "Mustafa" means "the chosen one" or "the one chosen from many", my father's name Ismail/Ishmail is an Aramic name (according to wikipedia, I've always known it as Hebrew) which is also mentioned in the Bible and the Qur'an (a son of Abraham). Samuel because it is a name I like and one that historically (Samuel the Judge) denoted wisdom. Other names that I would name my sons & daughters Boys: Mohammed (after my father in law) Adam Kevin Ayoub (Arabic for Job) Joseph (or the Arabic Yousef) Girls: Farah (Arabic for happines/joy) Hibah (Arabic for gift) Jennifer Laura Aya (Arabic for "Meaningful Parable")
Don't forget to vote if the response was helpful
Sig history "dad" Ishmail-Samuel Mustafa "There is no wealth like knowledge, no poverty like ignorance" Ali Ibn Abi Talib
Mustafa Ismail Mustafa wrote: Keep it up. Fool.
I now think of you as Mr. T! - Trollslayer
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Top 100 boys names[^]- Top 100 girls names[^] Looking at the top names, I can't say that many of them actually appeal. If, and this is a big IF, I had a child I would reject most of the names in there without thinking about it. Going by the BBC article people are being influenced by "celebrity". When are we going to stop this vacuousness?! Maybe I'm being old fashioned, but when I look at the names I'd pick they all have some sort of personal or cultural significance for me. William and James would be on my list as I have ancestors with those names. Callum would make it for cultural reasons. (3 out of the top 25). Robert (cultural) is the only other names that appeals in the rest of the top 100. Andrew (family), Angus (family), Euan (family) (although the alternative Ewan is there), Iain (cultural) or Murdo (cultural). For a girl, only Katie (out of the top 25) would make it (for cultural reasons). Expanding it to the top 100: Isabella (family), Caitlin (cultural), and Keira (cultural). Names I'd choose that didn't make it were Rachael (family) (although the alternative spelling Rachel is there), Catriona (family), Fiona (family), or Margaret (family). So, if you had to name a baby what would your shortlist be, and why would the name be there?
Developer Day Scotland 2 - Free community conference Recent blog posts: *Throwing Exceptions *Training Developers * Method hiding or overriding - or the difference between new and virtual
there use to be rule-of-thumb guidelines for baby names (mentioned in a Genelogy class I took many years ago): 1st son named after mothers father 2nd son named after fathers father 1st daughter named after fathers mother 2nd daugther named after mothers mother not necessarily the entire babys' name, but at least part of it, so Colin's 2nd grandson might have a name of Colin Thomas ??? or a middle name of James Angus ???
Steve _________________ I C(++) therefore I am
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Colin Angus Mackay wrote:
Do the parents of these children know each other, or is that just a coincidence? But 8 Harrisons! Wow!
Some do, most dont. Between friends, family, work, mothers groups etc we know a lot of people with young kids. It's just the current fad here. Those of us that grew up with Star Wars and Indiana Jones are now of child bearing age
Chewbacca, Yoda, Boba, Greedo and Jaba will probably get their @#$% kicked over and over in school ... :doh:
Steve _________________ I C(++) therefore I am
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there use to be rule-of-thumb guidelines for baby names (mentioned in a Genelogy class I took many years ago): 1st son named after mothers father 2nd son named after fathers father 1st daughter named after fathers mother 2nd daugther named after mothers mother not necessarily the entire babys' name, but at least part of it, so Colin's 2nd grandson might have a name of Colin Thomas ??? or a middle name of James Angus ???
Steve _________________ I C(++) therefore I am
Steve Mayfield wrote:
1st son named after mothers father 2nd son named after fathers father
In the Arab world, these two are certainly in reverse order. I suppose I'm a bit of a special case; I'm named after my Paternal Grandfather (Mustafa)and (Steve) is the name my mother chose.
Don't forget to vote if the response was helpful
Sig history "dad" Ishmail-Samuel Mustafa "There is no wealth like knowledge, no poverty like ignorance" Ali Ibn Abi Talib
Mustafa Ismail Mustafa wrote: Keep it up. Fool.
I now think of you as Mr. T! - Trollslayer