T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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353.1 | "I named her Ashley because it's 'different.'" | EDUHCI::WARREN | | Thu May 04 1989 13:36 | 4 |
| These lists are great. They should be passed out in every childbirth
class so when people think they are picking something "different,"
they'll realize they aren't the only ones!
|
353.2 | 1987 | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T... | Thu May 11 1989 16:47 | 31 |
| The following list is from Bruce Lansky, The Best Baby Name
Book. Thanks to Lori Hagen.
Most Popular Names -- 1987
1. Jessica
2. Sara, Sarah
3. Amanda
4. Ashley
5. Jennifer
6. Brittany
7. Kristin
8. Heather
9. Stephanie
10. Lindsay
11. Rachel
12. Lauren
13. Emily
14. Michelle
15. Rebecca
16. Nicole, Nichole
17. Katherine
18. Erica
19. Danielle
20. Megan, Meghan
21. Christina
22. Mary
23. Courtney
24. Erin
25. Katie
|
353.3 | Trends | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T... | Thu May 11 1989 17:41 | 26 |
| Here's what hot and what's not for girl's names:
o Big gainers: Brittany and Emily (first time on the charts),
Kristin (16), Laura/Lauren (13), Heather (10), Rachel (8)
... I'm not a big TV watcher, but a lot of these sound like
day- or prime-time soap names
o Big losers: Melissa, Elizabeth, Amy, Jamie, and Kelly (off
the charts); Megan (13), Nicole (11), Katherine (8) ...
DON'T name your girl Melissa -- it lost at least 22 points
-- a safe bet that people are really sick of it
o Top 5 names barely changed
o Names that derived originally from male names and surnames
(or sound like it): Ashley, Brittany, Lindsay, Courtney all
increased healthily ... a reflection on our yuppie culture?
... I assume the average person associates these more with
the naming traditions of the American upper classes than
with any conscious sexism
o More letters: short, cute names like Amy, Erin, etc. tended
to give way to longer, more formal names like Stephanie,
Brittany, Danielle, etc.
-- Cliff
|
353.4 | On Second Thought | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T... | Mon May 15 1989 17:02 | 28 |
| > o Names that derived originally from male names and surnames
> (or sound like it): Ashley, Brittany, Lindsay, Courtney all
> increased healthily ... a reflection on our yuppie culture?
> ... I assume the average person associates these more with
> the naming traditions of the American upper classes than
> with any conscious sexism
Maybe people just like the letter "y" -- this would seem to
be borne out by Mary and Emily. Apart from just the sound of
the letter itself, however, "y" may tell us something about
society's trends.
There are, for example, several endings that are feminine:
"-elle," "-a," "-ine," "-ette," etc. Most of these, however,
have no other important connotations than femininity. Endings
like "-y" and "-ette," however, are also diminutives -- i.e.,
they mean "little."
Diminutives can be either a term of endearment or a tad belit-
tling. "-Y" itself can even sound a little childish. Think of
the way you talk to a baby: nappie, potty, doggie, etc. Could
it be that this trend expresses -- extremely subconsiously --
our society's a backlash against feminism, our growing
conservatism, who knows?
From out in left field,
-- Cliff
|
353.5 | Instincts not statistics | CSC32::V_PETTY | | Fri Jun 23 1989 23:23 | 16 |
| When I was pregnant I was leary of picking a name too common. I
had a boy's name picked out without a doubt (my roommate wanted me if I
had a boy to name him Justin for Just In[other] Petty) but I was
settled upon Andrew Thomas. But a girls name was much harder to decide
upon. I ended up going to the hospital with three girls name to choose
from, just in case it was a girl. One was unusual, one was middle of the
road, and one was the most popular name in the country. I figured that I
would know when the baby was born what it was to be named.
On December 17, 1988 when I had my baby, and it was indeed a girl, the task
of naming her was there. Although after one look there wasn't any problem.
She didn't look like an Ondrea, she didn't look like a Kristin, she looked
like a Jessica. Plain as day and as simple as that, Jessica Lynn. What
this all comes down to is who cares what is popular, what is trendy,
and what is not. Follow your instinct not statistics.
|
353.6 | Re -.1 | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T... | Mon Jun 26 1989 16:23 | 12 |
| Good advice if you're the only one involved in the process.
Your child might, however, get a little tired of having 20
other girls respond when the teacher calls out "Jennifer!"
or being know as "plain Jane," or having people never able
to pick her out in the phone book because her name's "Mary
Smith." Same kind of thing applies to strange names, strange
combinations, trendiness, ugly intials, etc. Yes, I realize
that there are lots of people to please in the naming process
-- spouse, grandparents, relatives, friends -- but let's not
forget the most important one.
-- Cliff (Self-Appointed Infant Nomenclature Advocate)
|
353.7 | Holly Schnell | STEREO::FAHEL | Amalthea, the Silver Unicorn | Tue Aug 08 1989 16:52 | 11 |
| If I meet one more Jennifer or Megan, I'll SCREAM!
(just kidding!)
But seriously, when my sister was deciding on a name for her baby
(she knew that is was going to be a girl) I talked her out of Megan
because it is so popular.
She went with Holly. Different, but simple.
K.C. Fahel
|
353.8 | More recent List??? | FSOA::CBOUCHARD | Is it Friday yet? | Wed Dec 11 1991 13:35 | 5 |
| Does anyone have a more recent "Most Popular Names" list than 1987?
If so, could you please post.
Thanks,
|