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baby names

courtesy of nameberry.com

 

 

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2009's 15 Hottest Baby Name Trends

by Pamela Redmond Satran and Linda Rosenkrantz

What do we see ahead for 2009? Here, our 15 top trend predictions.

BIGGEST BIG-PICTURE TREND: DEPRESSION ERA NAMES
The hit TV show Mad Men, set in the early 60s, reintroduced names that were all the rage when the show's characters were born in the 1930s: Don, Betty, Joan, Peggy. They're plain names fit for hard times, and we're sure to see more of them in the hardscrabble months ahead: Dorothy, Helen, Ruth, and Frances for girls; Thomas, Edward, Frank, Raymond, and yes, even Harold for boys. Plus stylish new occupational names - Gardener, Ranger, Miller - are likely to gain in appeal for both boys and girls as actual jobs become more scarce.

MOST SURPRISING COMEBACK NAME
Leon, middle name choice for Brangelina twin Knox, had become a joke in the U.S. but was on the rise in Europe, where all lion-related names - Leo, Leonora, Lionel - are tres chic. Leon and Leonie are the number one names in Germany, and for the first time in decades, have style potential in the U.S.

BEST NEW TREND INSPIRED BY A CELEBRITY BABY NAME
Jessica AlbaJessica Alba's infant Honor has ushered in a new appreciation for virtue names, on the rise through the name ranks - and hopefully also in spirit – with Faith, Hope, Patience, Mercy, Justice, True, and Pax.

 

HOTTEST GENDER-BENDING TREND
Boys names that end in a vowel sound and girls' names that end in a consonant. Examples: Ezra, Eli, Noah, Hugo for boys, and for girls, Annabel instead of Annabella, for instance, or Gwen instead of Jenna.

ETHNIC NAME GROUPS MOST LIKELY TO RISE
Hawaiian and Russian, thanks to First Daughters Malia and Sasha, short for Natasha, Obama.

TRENDIEST TREND-RELATED TREND
Cate BlanchettNames that are considered too trendy by stylish parents before they ever even really get popular, by virtue of their association with other, trendier names or with high-visibility celebrities. Examples: Ada, fresh yet too close to the megapopular Ava. Pearl, too much like groovy Ruby. Roman, son of Cate Blanchett and also of Harvey Keitel. And Matilda, toddler of Michelle Williams and Heath Ledger.

GIRL TREND READY TO JUMP THE SHARK
Names that end in -ella, from Isabella to Gabriella to Bella and even Ella herself. The long trend for that extra-syllable a ending is about to end.

BOY TREND READY TO JUMP THE SHARK
Names that rhyme with -aden: Braden, Caden, Jaden, Xaden, you've had your moment in the sun.

COOLEST MIDDLE NAME TREND
Names that carry powerful meaning, launched when people adopted the middle name Hussein in solidarity with Obama. Less name than symbol, the new middle name may carry political meaning, convey ethnic background, stand in for a place, animal, character, or thing that has meaning for the parents.

NEW "IT" VOWEL
I, with the rise of such iNames as Isaiah, Iris, Isaac, and Isla.

MOST FASHIONABLE CONSONANT
Jennifer GarnerV, vivifying names wherever it falls: Olive [The name of Isla Fisher and Sacha Baron Cohen's daughter], Vivienne, Eva, Victor, Avery, Violet [The name of Jennifer Garner's older daughter], Evan, Nevaeh [That's Heaven backwards, for those of you who didn't notice it!].

 

NAME TREND THAT'S BEST FOR THE EARTH
Green names, which include the recycling of grandma and grandpa names such as Mabel and Max, and also nature names drawn from water (Bay, Lake), trees (Birch, Oak), and flowers (Violet, Poppy, Iris).

TREND MOST LIKELY TO CROSS THE OCEAN
The hot British baby-naming trend of using nicknames from Millie to Alfie to Dixie and Dot is coming our way, as a light-hearted antidote to tough times.

MOST SURPRISING CELEBRITY NAME INSPIRATION
Arianna Huffington, whose Huffington Post was the media star of the 2008 election, is an attractive and influential person, but hardly the kind of tabloid hottie who usually inspires thousands of baby namesakes. But joining Ashton and Angelina, the name Arianna has ascended with Huffington's renown, reaching number 70 in the last year counted and certain to zoom much higher.

TREND WE'D MOST LIKE TO SEE DIE
Scary, violent names like Talon, Cannon, Gunner.

Pamela Redmond Satran and Linda Rosenkrantz About The Authors

Pamela Redmond Satran and Linda Rosenkrantz are the coauthors of nine bestselling baby name books, including The Baby Name Bible and the upcoming Cool Irish Names for Babies, published by St. Martin's Press, and the developers of the new baby-naming website nameberry.