The Game of the Name
By airyfairy
- 9326 reads
The list of the UK’s most popular baby names is out. Rather like Ant and Dec at an awards ceremony, or the Brownlee brothers at a triathlon, the front runners are predictable. This year Oliver and Olivia are the winners, with Harry and George, Amelia and Emily, taking the silvers and bronzes.
There will be the usual tutting and adjusting of lorgnettes over the appearance, lower down the list, of names from fiction or celebrity. Khaleesi and Tyrion from Game of Thrones, Kylo and Rey from Star Wars. Harper is moving up the rankings, possibly not because of a revival of interest in To Kill A Mockingbird. But of course we’ve always called our children after celebrities and fictional characters. Lorna, Pamela, Wendy, Vanessa, all made up by writers looking for something to make their characters distinctive. The mighty Olivia itself was invented by Shakespeare. Victoria and Florence increased greatly in popularity as tributes to Her Majesty and Miss Nightingale. My grandfather, a working class lad, was given the imposing two names Hector MacDonald, after a distinguished Victorian major general. The curse of celebrity names was felt a year or two later when the major general was disgraced for episodes involving little boys
Traditionally, ‘made up’ names have been given to girls rather than boys. It’s as if a girl’s name was seen as something a bit more frivolous, that you could play around with, while a boy’s name should be more serious and solid. Sir Walter Scott made up Cedric, although he may just have got the spelling of the old name Cerdic wrong. Like Shakespeare and Imogen, which should have been the ancient name Innogen. These days, though, parents seem more adventurous with boys’ names too. David hasn’t made a comeback over the last year or so, but Bowie has been given to a number of babies, including some girls. I’m still looking for a Lemmy.
I like the fact the UK is quite relaxed about what people call their children. In Iceland, the name has to conjugate in Icelandic, so you can’t have anything foreign that doesn’t. Lots of countries have approved lists of names, and you must get special permission to have anything else. New Zealand, for example, declined Sex Fruit and Satan, but was happy with Number 16 Bus Shelter. Why on earth you would want to call your child…oh. I see. Moving swiftly on…
Last names are a whole other question, provoking another clashing of lorgnettes. My children’s father and I were not married, and we decided not only to give our first child both surnames, but to put mine last. Thirty years ago this was seen as a bold feminist statement. In fact it was because, put the other way round, our son sounded like a railway station. It was a compromise, though, because I wanted to be creative and give him a totally different surname. It seemed to me that having spent days deciding on a first name, worrying whether various candidates would suit him, whether they would result in teasing, whether they had unfortunate connotations in other countries, whether they would upset one side of the family or the other – after all that, he would get his last name more or less by accident. Their dad, however, felt that he was entitled to a break from social insurrection, having weathered the family storms about no marriage, a double barrelled name, and a naming ceremony rather than a christening. And when I got to meet my baby, I really didn’t care what his last name was going to be.
I never have given a stuff about my children’s surname (we just went the same route with our daughter), because I had nothing to do with it. When they were little and asked me why they had that name (double barrelleds weren’t as common as they are now) I told them that both Mummy and Daddy made them, and that’s why they had both names. They regarded that as perfectly logical. When other people (still) ask me, ‘But what if they do the same, and their partner also has a double barrel, and your grandchildren end up with four surnames?’, I reply, ‘If my kids and their partners haven’t got the nouse to work this out for themselves, and come up with a suitable name for their own children, they shouldn’t be damn well breeding in the first place.’
I’ve known several parents who did choose different surnames for their children, without noticeably catastrophic results for the kids. It can be the answer to parents’ prayers, if you really really want a particular first name but you worry about the combination with your own surname. Holly Bush, for example, or Autumn Leeves (both real examples, reluctantly abandoned by parents). Why should you discard the name you love and that completely suits your child, because of an accident of history? Find a surname that you love just as much, and that suits your new cherub as much as that cherished first name.
Pick your own. Do it yourself. In Britain, it’s perfectly legal to pick another last name for your child, just as it’s perfectly legal for them to call themselves anything they like after they’re sixteen (as long as it’s not obscene or otherwise anti-social). And if, ten years on, they decide that, honestly, it wasn’t such a good plan, they can always change it back. Or change it forwards, to yet another inspired, personal, do-it-yourself moniker.
Picture: http://tinyurl.com/y82w2wk
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Comments
I suppose parental surnames
I suppose parental surnames have given a link with the past that many people like. I do worry about children being given a first name their parents find funny, with little thought as to whether the children will enjoy the humour. Rhiannon
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still chuckling over sex
still chuckling over sex fruit and satan... really enjoyed reading this airy, as someone who gave both my children 'funny' names AND went the double-barrelled way as you did, mind you, my youngest son and his partner have pointed out the problems for any children they might have. I will quote you when they next mention it.
edit: when I say 'funny' I mean unusual, but normal for my family. We all have unusual names. No sex bus stops here!
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hahahaha - I had no idea. Glad it made you laugh
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I was interested to read this
I was interested to read this piece, because I kept my last husband's surname, but my son kept his dad's and my partner now has his own surname but we aren't married. I've been addressed by three different surnames and it doesn't bother me at all. The only time it becomes awkward is when bills need paying, or to do with cheques going into my bank, then I have to be more specific.
I like the idea of children being able to choose their names, after all it's they that have to live with the name.
Jenny.
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I have
to admit that, for me, a double-barrelled name still carries the whiff of the famous sketch from The Frost Report with Barker, Corbett, and Cleese. As it becomes more common, I care less and certainly am not as provoked as I would have been at 18 when I really believed I was as red as Rosa Luxembourg. We all mellow with age. Besides, I quite enjoy the Spanish way, which can involve vast concatenations of surnames, especially if you really are part of the nobility.
Anyway, what's in a name? As I'm sure somebody wrote somewhere.
I do like this kind of whimsical piece and enjoyed this one very much.
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What an entertaining read! A
What an entertaining read! A great starting point for writing too - as we all have our naming stories, it goes deep.
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Ooh - I wonder what you're
Ooh - I wonder what you're writing...
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This thought-provoking and
This thought-provoking and entertaining piece may inspire you write about your naming experiences - it's our facebook and twitter pick of the day! Do share if you like it too.
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well, I've got a number of
well, I've got a number of names and not all of them start with swear words. If you can call a dog satan I don't see why you can't call a child satan. One if far more likely to be satanic than the other. Then, of course, surname where traditionally part of the naming of what we do. Eg smith. taylor, trump?
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I like the idea of choosing
I like the idea of choosing your surname. I remember when we got our son's birth certificate and the lady asked us what our professions were. We did not feel happy putting down shelf stacker and call center operative, but that's what we were, officially, and the birth certificate was an official thing. But it did not desribe us or define us, as Smith must have defined someone who was a smith. It would be more fun if you chose your surname when you felt secure in knowing the sort of person you were, like a coming of age ceremony, and your children could put s'dottir or s'son after, like the Vikings till they were old enough to choose their own.
We chose a name for our son that would not mean he would lift his head ten times a day thinking his name had been called, only to find it was someone else. To start with, he didn't like that he was the only person with this name. Now he likes that it's different, and is self confident enough to choose to look different also.
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My name
is as you see here. There weren't many around until Trainspotting came out. I didn't like my name until I discovered girls (long before girls discovered Ewan MacGregor) and the good thing is that there aren't many books with Ewan on the cover, unless they've got Ian Mc written in front of it.
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I gave this a read earlier.
I gave this a read earlier. It's thorough and well researched - I didn't know that Shakespeare invented the name Olivia - a good one for English teachers. I liked it a lot especially in the first half. I think that towards the end it gets a little laboured. I think because it settles into such a comfortably centrist position. But the writing is crisp and enjoyable throughout.
I stumbled a bit on this sentence:
I like the fact the UK is quite relaxed about what people call their children.
I think there is an ambiguity in the sentence that tripped me up. Probably says more about my weakness as a reader than about the writing.
A very good non-fiction piece.
Thanks for reading. I am grateful for your time.
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Ha. Woderful reading this,
Ha. Woderful reading this, airyfairy. We almost named our son Stwart, but feared the inevitable 'Stewey' nickname. So with went with just plain Sam. Not Samuel. Their was a great grandparent on my wife's end named just plain Sam. And Samuel Clemens be my favorite writer. The deal was done. When Sam decided to do his online movie review blog he changed the surname from McDonough to McDunna. He was tired of all the buthering the named went through. Mc Dunuff, McDunah and worse still McDonog. Ha. I had no propblem with McDunna. Seriously considered it myself. Glad I read this this morning. Brought back some fun memories.
Rich xx
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I enjoyed reading this. We
I enjoyed reading this. We named our children names we like but now when I call them I cringe because they seem so bourgeois and cliché. Never mind. I still like them and think they suit them.
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