What? A popular AA name is Tanisha, but it can be spelled Taneesha, Tanesha, Tenisha. That alone would split the numbers enough to keep it off the list. There's really only one way to spell William. And there's nothing "oh lord" worthy about noting that AAs use a different set of names than other racial groups, and that they more often go for unique names. Don't forget Tynesha (DD has a friend with that spelling of the name). I actually know several AA Allison's and Ashley's. But for the most part, if you looked at the names of my daughter's AA friends, you wouldn't have a clue what race they were (Leah, Madison, Emily, Naomi, Caitlyn). |
I would add Benjamin to the boys list. |
Definitely for babies as well. Of the 8 babies in the infant room at daycare... 2 Henrys. And I know another infant Henry. |
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Far and away...Jack. I know so many Jacks.
For girls...Julia, Sophia, Isabel, Caroline. I hear all of these on the playground pretty regularly. All great names though. |
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It's FREAKY how we all try to pick an original name, and then end up inadvertantly picking the same name as everyone else. I know so many people who picked off-the-wall names for their kids, only to have them be super popular. Because we're so affected by our culture, it seems the only way to ensure a unique name is to pick something really old-sounding to our generation (e.g., Mildred or Edna), something that sounds pretty mundane (e.g., Susie or Bob), or something that has become a casualty of our pop culture (e.g., Kermit or Miley).
Anyway, I think there are a lot of "--on" names floating around for boys (Mason, Sampson, Soren, etc.). A girl name that seems popular lately is Bailey. |
| Don't think it's been mentioned yet, but I know three Noras under 3. |
Actually, I think picking something old is how you get a popular name these days. If you want unique, pick something popular in your own generation, like Jennifer, Susan, Angela, Christine. |
If you want something unique, pick something from your mom's generation, not your grandma's. I don't know many girls called Nancy, although friends just named their daughter Carol-- not Caroline, which is getting common-- and I thought, now that's unique! Then again, those names don't sound nice to us the way ones further removed do, do they? |
| I have a Lucy and am honestly shocked to see her name on this list! I've never met another Lucy in my entire life, let alone a child my daughter's age. I *thought* we were being orginal. Can someone please let me know where all the Lucy's are? FWIW, We live in VA and she attends school in NW DC. |
I actually read an interesting article about this. It's the REALLY old names that are popular now (like from our great-grandparents' generation). These are the names of those who are likely deceased, as morbid as that sounds. If you pick names from our grandparents' generation (or even our parents' generation), then you're more likely to be safe (originality wise). These names actually conjure an image of an "old person" to us. The old, old names don't actually make us think of old people; they sound new again because we're so far removed from them. |
Laura Wattenberg says parents like names roughly 60-90 years older than them (I think we could safely say that refers to their grandparents or great-grandparents, depending on the timing between generations), or 20-40 years younger than them (their children's and children's friends names!). http://www.babynamewizard.com/node/32989 So I agree that names from our parents' generation would tend to be safest. Those or ugly names that will never, ever be popular again.
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| And by safest I mean least popular! |
I know a Lucy in Atlanta. And two in NoVa. |
There is one in my playgroup (9 months old) and just saw one in CVS this week who was about 6 years old. |
I'll buy that. |