Monthly Archives: July 2013

Baby Girl or Boy W., Sibling to Atticus and Elm

Amy writes:

I’m pregnant with our 3rd and probably final baby, due in February. We have a 3 year old boy named Atticus and a 2 year old girl (whose initials you and your readers helped us with before she was born, thank you!) named Elm. We love both of their names and want something unique but meaningful for this baby too. Atticus was named after To Kill A Mockingbird and I like that it has an easy explanation for introductions (“Atticus, like To Kill A Mockingbird”). Elm was named because my husband and I met while working at a summer camp and fell in love in the woods. It also has an easy explanation (“Elm, like the tree”). Our last name starts with W which rules out lots of lovely W names such as Willa for a girl or Wilder for a boy. Can’t start with W and you have to be able to pronounce it at first glance are the only hard and fast rules. Our name method has always been that I’m the one who comes up with the names and my husband is the one who vetos. I am less picky than he is and would have happily settled on several different names for each of our kids.

Here are the girl names he has vetoed so far for various reasons for this baby:
Felicity (my favorite)
Iris
Lucy
Juniper (June)
Calla
Fiona

We had decided on a boy name, Orion, but now my husband says he’s having second thoughts and is worried it’s too “out there.” It’s very close to Atticus in rank on the social security list and considering Elm has never even been on the list at all I don’t think it’s too “out there” for our name set. I love the stars and mythology tie-ins, it has an easy introduction explanation (“Orion, like the constellation”), it’s something I can remember as child my mom always pointing out to us in the sky, and I love the idea of a stars/space nursery. Atticus, Elm, and Orion. What do you think?

The middle name for either boy or girl will be Beck, my mother in law’s maiden name.

I’m only 10 weeks along but we like to have our names picked out early on and we will pick one definitively and stick with it, not keep 2 or 3 rolling around until he/she is born. So laying a hand on my belly and thinking about baby Something Beck Doubleyou just isn’t doing it for me. Help!

Thank you!

 

Before I’d encountered the name on an actual child, I might have guessed the name Orion would be too out there. But I’ve encountered one boy named Orion and one girl with a similar name (Auryan), both in a way that let me hear their names said again and again, and the effect was not out-there. On the girl, the name had the flavor of Aurora (exotic, yes, but not weird), combined with the boyish Ryan. On the boy, the name sounds so much like the familiar Ryan (in fact, my ear first heard it as O’Ryan), it takes the “out there” factor down significantly. It definitely catches the ear as distinctive, and also as distinct from Ryan—but the similar sound makes the ear say “Well, why WOULDN’T that be a name?”

Girl name possibilities (I’m suggesting even ones that aren’t ideal with Beck):

Athena
Audra
Azalea
Briar
Clarity
Cleo
Clover
Coral
Fallon
Fern
Haven
Hyacinth
Juno
Lark
Linden
Marigold
Opal
Pearl
Prairie
Spring
Verity
Wren
Zinnia

 

 

Name update! Amy writes:

I wrote to you several times this pregnancy (Baby W, sibling to Atticus & Elm) and you & your readers were so helpful. My husband and I read through your reply & all the comments multiple times. We quickly & easily agreed on Ivy Beck W. as our girl name after several people suggested it in the first post. The boy name was trickier & at different points we had settled on Sullivan nn Sully then Hawthorn nn Hawk when two days before the birth we both decided it just didn’t feel right and went back to our original choice, Orion. I think secretly we were both expecting a girl and thought maybe that’s why we’d had so much uncertainty about a boy name. But surprise! It IS a boy and we’re thrilled. Orion Cash W., 2/10/14, 9 lbs 5 oz! (middle name honors my husband’s best friend). He and his name are both perfect- thank you again for all your help!

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Baby Naming Issue: How Do You Know if You Love a Name?

Allyson writes:

How do you know if you LOVE a name versus thinking you love a name? Sort of like when you’re 13 you LOVE your boyfriend but your parents know it’s puppy love and in another couple of years you won’t even remember his name? My husband and I are trying for #2 soon. We thought we had a boy name picked out – Colton – but I’m over it. It’s just very blah to me now. We have another boy name picked out (Tucker), but I don’t know if I love it….or if I love it right now and in 10 years will wish I had chosen something else. Or first son is Barrett, a name I stumbled on before I was even pregnant. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.

Oh, and if you have any names in the Barrett – Colton – Tucker genre I’d love to hear those as well. Or last name is Clark so it wipes out some of my favorites (like Blake and Cole).

Thanks!

 

“How do you know if you love a name?” is a question I’d answer in this case with another question: How did you know with your first son’s name? For some people, they know they love a name when they feel like they can’t let it go; for other people, the name feels like it clicks into place; for still others, they know when no other name seems better. And some people never DO know: they run out of time and have to choose one of several good options.

It’s true that some parents later regret a choice—but in most cases, putting the name on the birth certificate seems to freeze it into place. We’d chosen a girl name for our first two pregnancies (both boys), and when we actually had a girl we no longer wanted to use the name—but if we’d had a girl earlier and HAD used the name, I don’t think we would have become similarly bored with it. Once you use the name, it gets linked firmly to the child: the name is no longer “a name,” it’s “this beloved person.” If there are any regrets about the name, they tend to be minor and have more to do with things other than the name itself: for example, a family may regret that a name got so popular or wish they’d loved something less popular, but that doesn’t mean they would actually like to choose a different name for the child.

It’s nice that there’s typically a period of time (during pregnancy, or while waiting for a child to be adoptable) for trying out names before the final decision needs to be made. I found I had several names that rose to the top during the choosing process and then fell right back down—puppy-love names. Or I had names that I would have thought pre-pregnancy would be contenders, but as soon as an actual baby was on the way, the names didn’t feel right anymore. Other names endured—which is not to say I never had doubts (in the hospital I was still fretting about my daughter’s name, and I wish we’d known a name we used for one of our sons was Top 10 in our state even though it was in the 30s nationally), but rather that the name lasted long enough for me to be fairly sure it was at least on the list of names that would be good choices for the baby.

Two of my favorite surname names are Wilson and Miller. Similar to Tucker (but with fewer potential word-confusion issues) is Turner. Similar to Colton are Colter and Coleman and Colby and Lincoln and Nicholson and Keegan and Collins.

Baby Girl Marasco, Sister to Malia

Rebecca writes:

Naming our first daughter was extremely difficult and due to an early delivery we enlisted your help but didn’t get decide on a name until she was already born in the hospital.  https://www.swistle.com/babynames/2010/06/30/baby-girl-marasco/.  Our older daughter is now 3 years old and we love her name (Malia Aiko Marasco) and get compliments on it all the time.  We are facing the impossible task of naming another girl and have been so imtimdated by it that we have left it to the last minute.  Our next (and last) baby is due in September but it looks like she will be early as well.

My name is Rebecca Marasco and my husband is of Japanese and Italian descent and his name is Marc.  We are open to another Hawaiian or Japanese name, but it’s not required.  We don’t have any family names we are conscidering this time but an “E” name would be nice to honor my grandmother.  We are almost out of time and don’t have any names we love and can’t find any names we like more than Malia.

Our top contender (Seneca) was actually the runner up for our older daughter.  It was a name I liked all along, but my husband didn’t care for it the first time.  Now it’s his favorite too as he said it just took 3 years to warm up to it.  I can’t help but feel that if it wasn’t good enough for Malia it isn’t good enough for the new baby.  I was thinking of Seneca Meadow Marasco but I worry it sounds too much like a place.

The only other name I liked was Aria (husband doesn’t like Ariana) as I also like the nick name Ari.  I do worry that it is getting too popular and is a little too similar to Malia.  I also like Everly and or middle names like Echo, Nova or Meadow.

My husband likes the name Hazel, but that’s just too old fashioned to me.  He also like Lucia (which I found too close to Malia) as well as Leila and Aria.

We would like a name that pronouces easily, isn’tt too similar to her sister’s name, isn’t too popular but still sounds familiar.  Besides Seneca being a boy’s name, we are generally not interested in boy’s names turned into girl’s names.

Thank you so much for your help and we look forward to your advice and the great advice from your readers,

 

Every single name except the name Malia could by definition be put in a category titled “Wasn’t Good Enough for Malia,” so I’d suggest starting by re-naming that category. Another good category title could be “Wasn’t the Right Name for Malia”: her name was MALIA, not Seneca. Perhaps the name Seneca is exactly right for this baby, and that’s why it wasn’t right for your first baby. If you both love it and nothing else seems right, I think you’ve got your name.

We had something similar happen at our house. When we were expecting our firstborn, I had a name high on my list but Paul didn’t like it. When we were expecting our second baby, I had the name on my list again—and Paul chose it as his favorite, and we used it even though I felt a little weird about using a name he’d previously completely rejected. And it worked out even better than I’d hoped: the actual name is a name that seems happy and easy-going to us, and our secondborn’s temperament matches the way we see the name—but our firstborn’s doesn’t. For us, our image of the name would have been a misfit on our firstborn, but it was perfect on our secondborn.

Seneca Meadow does sound a little place-like to me, but not overly. Do you tend to use first-and-middles in your family—that is, do people call your first daughter Malia Aiko? If so, then I’d probably look for another middle name. If not, and if Meadow is your favorite middle name, I think I’d be more on the side of choosing what you like: middle names tend to disappear into Paperwork Only after the birth announcements go out.

If Meadow continues not to sit right with you, I’d suggest looking at the names that didn’t work as first names (Hazel, Lucia, Leila, Aria). Seneca Aria is my favorite: it lets you use that name without worrying about its popularity or its similarity to Malia, and Seneca Aria is nicely parallel to Malia Aiko.

 

 

Name update! Rebecca writes:

thank you again for choosing our question for your website and thank you for running it in time for us to have a little while to digest all of the information before our daughter’s early arrival.  We still didn’t have a name until after she was born but we are very happy to introduce Seneca Alani Marasco.  Your advice made it easier to realize that her name has always been Seneca and feeling good about that.  Your reader’s comments did give us pause about not wanting to offend people, but as we had a connection to Seneca Lake after a fair about of research on it’s Greek roots, wide spread use for naming and places in multiple states, the company, institutions as well as a name that was bestowed upon a tribe– we felt comfortable with it’s general use.  The most exciting find on your reader’s comments (besides some kind words about The Seneca Falls Convention) was bringing up the name Alani again for my consideration.  My husband brought it up before and I dismissed it– but seeing it in the comments made us add it to the list.  We thought it was a beautiful name that worked nicely with Seneca (as it was short and feminine) as well as matching her sister as it’s Hawaiian and an A name like Aiko.  Thank you very much to you and your readers.

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Baby Girl Krevitz-with-an-L, Sister to Molly

B. writes:

We are expecting our second child in November and have just learned it is another little girl. We are super excited about this — but now are tasked with finding a name that blends with her sister’s.

Our daughter, almost 3 now, is Molly — a name I have loved ever since I was young, and never thought I would get to use it for a daughter. I am so in love with the name, and it fits my daughter’s personality so much that I feel a lot of pressure to come up with something just as perfect for our baby girl on the way.

Molly’s middle name is Aneen (pronounced uh- neen). Aneen is my and my mother’s middle name. Our last name is similar to Krevitz, but with an L. I would like to honor family again with the middle name this time around. For our middle names, those choices are Rana (pronounced Renee, after my husband’s sister who was killed in a car accident about 11 years ago); Beth (after my mother); Marie (my mother-in-law’s middle name) or Maria (after my grandmother). Our top choice is Rana for the meaningfulness of using this.

For first names, we have it limited to two, the only two we have really felt drawn to — but I would love to hear other suggestions as well. We like names that are not overly popular or super trendy or sound like made up names. I also tend to like boy names for girls – and one consideration was to use Coty, another family name that would have significant meaning, as it would honor both my husband’s sister and her infant son who was also lost in the car accident.

Right now this is our list, ranked in order of appeal:
Madison (nickname Maddie — we love the combo of Molly and Maddie, two little sweet girls running around)
Reese

Others that we discarded were:
Morgan
Quinn
Paige
Shelby
Logan

Thank you for your help –

 

That DOES seem hard. I think that because you loved the name Molly for so long, it could be helpful to give up the idea of finding anything you love as much. There might just not BE such a name. And of course by now you’ve come to love the name Molly even more, since it’s your daughter’s name—it would be hard for any name to measure up to that. My guess is that you will COME to love another name as much after you use it, but that unless you had a second name you’ve loved since you were young, you might not love it quite as much during the choosing stage.

With a name like Molly, which is used exclusively for girls in the United States, I don’t think I’d go too boyish for a second girl. Reese is borderline; Coty crosses that line for me, if you mean you’re considering it as a first name. (It also seems like it could be a painful choice, considering the circumstances.) Coty might make a great middle name, though I think my first choice would still be Rana.

Because you’d like to avoid popular and trendy, I’d cross Madison off the list. (Molly and Madison also makes me think of Dolley Madison, as well as Dolly Madison, though neither of those are negative associations.)

If you’d like the nickname Maddie, you could get it from Madelyn/Madeline/Madeleine, though those names too have been very popular. There’s also Madigan: it’s similar to Morgan and Logan from your list; it has not been popular at all; it has a boyish sound; and it ties into Molly’s Celtic roots. Madigan Rana; Molly and Madigan; Molly and Maddie.

Another option is Megan. Megan Rana; Molly and Megan; Molly and Meg.

I find Molly and Reese a little bit of a surprising combination, style-wise. But I don’t think the combination is unpleasant, and both names have a similar energetic and friendly sound.

I like several other names on your discard list, too. Molly and Paige sounds adorable to me. Molly and Quinn sounds similar, though more unisex. Molly and Morgan seems close to achieving the Molly and Maddie effect.

Abigail is popular, but I think Molly and Abby gives you something like Molly and Maddie, while also matching the more old-fashioned/feminine image I have of the name Molly. Abigail Rana; Molly and Abigail; Molly and Abby. Or maybe you’d like Molly and Mabel, or Molly and Maisie, or Molly and Mindy, or Molly and Mandy?

Are you planning to have more children? If so, and if you went with a Molly/Maddie or Molly/Maisie type combination, would you feel like you had to find a third similar name? Perhaps something like Sadie would work well: it coordinates sweetly but without coordinating so well that a third name would stand out. Sadie Rana; Molly and Sadie.

Is your mother’s given name Beth, or is that short for Elizabeth? Elizabeth is a name with a lot of nickname possibilities that could be adorable with Molly. Molly and Libby, Molly and Betsy, Molly and Lizzy, Molly and Bess.

Molly seems to be a different style than the kinds of names you like now. What was it that got you hooked on the name Molly? Was there a Molly in a book or movie, or was it the name of someone you knew? I wonder if that would be a place to look for another name you like (nearly) as much.

 

 

Name update! B. writes:

Thank you to Swistle and all of her readers. We were so excited when our question was chosen for a blog, and the feedback and suggestions from both Swistle and readers truly gave us a lot to consider — issues we would have never thought of ourselves. We actually put Paige back on our list for awhile, after reading all the feedback. It was tough decision, and we went round and round on our names. Our little girl decided to arrive 5 weeks early…5 lbs. 14 oz, and I am happy to report that she is healthy and beautiful and has stolen our hearts — including her big sister Molly’s. In the end, we ended up back at the beginning with our very first instinct. Madison Rana was born Oct. 8, 2013 and we are so completely in love. Hearing our 3-year-old say “I love you Maddie” in her sweet little voice is just about the sweetest thing in the world. Thank you again for all your help!

Baby Boy Kershmen

Amanda writes:

My husband and I are expecting our first child in September – a little boy. My name is Amanda Lee and my husband’s name is Patrick Blake (he goes by Blake). Last name sounds like Kershmen.

We have narrowed our choices down to two names but I feel like there are so many options we haven’t considered. This is where you come in (hopefully!). The two names we like right now are Brady and Carter. We will probably use Mills (my maiden name) for a middle name. My husband’s middle name, Blake, is his mom’s maiden name, so we thought that might be a cool tradition to carry on. I’m not married to that, though, and if the name we choose doesn’t go with Mills as a middle name then we can change the middle name.

My husband likes Carter because it is a family name. His grandfather’s name was Anderson Carter. We also considered Anderson as a first name, which I absolutely love, but Anderson Kershmen sounds too long. Plus I don’t want him to be called Andy. I also like Carter but for some reason I just don’t love it. As of now, I’m leaning towards Brady. My biggest concern right now is that it doesn’t sound masculine enough… I guess because of the –y ending. Should that be a concern or is that my pregnancy hormones talking?

If we had a girl we would have named her Mila Blake (pronounced Myla). We plan on having 1 or 2 more kids after our son is born so hopefully we will eventually be able to use this name.

Do you have any name suggestions that have a similar style to the ones we are considering (other than Grady or Brody)?

Thank you!

 

With Kershmen, my favorite is Brady: Carter Kershmen feels like a lot of C/K and R sounds.

Brady is currently used almost exclusively for boys. In 2012, there were 2,849 new baby boys and only 41 new baby girls named Brady (for comparison, 243 new baby girls were named Carter). I like the idea of Brady Mills Kershmen, and maybe Carter for a future child’s middle name.

Other names that seem similar to Brady to me are Brayden and Aiden and Carson, but those all seem a little choppy with Kershmen. Maybe Davis? Davis Kershmen.

Let’s have a poll for the two finalists!

[yop_poll id=”22″]

 

 

Name update! Amanda writes:

Thanks so much to you and your readers for posting my question and for the great comments. Our son was born September 22 and my husband and I went back and forth on several name options until we finally decided on Brady Mills Kershmen.  I think we knew that was his name all along, and we are so happy we chose it!  Thank you again!

BMK 1

Baby Boy (R)othwell

A. writes:

My husband and I desperately need some help. Our last name is (R)othwell, and we are having our first child, a baby boy, due July 31st. Yes, that is 3 short weeks away!

We are really struggling with finding a first name. The middle name we chose is Steven, after my husband. I know you recommend not choosing a middle name first, but it is kind of a tradition on my husband’s side.

We do have a few names we agree on, but none we love. We can’t even get to a stage where we argue on them. Here are the ones we like currently:

Brady
Brenner
Brice

There is absolutely no reason why those all start with the letter B, just a weird coincidence. In fact, I am a little worried that if we choose one of those, his initials will be BSR. Is that bad? Will kids call him a bull-sh*t-er? Or am I over-thinking that?

As for the above names, is Brady too popular? I don’t know any personally, but I think it’s pretty high up on the popularity charts. And I really like the name Brice, but I’m just not sure if its right for us; I can’t picture myself saying it. Then there’s Brenner, which I have only ever heard of once. Is that okay? My hard rules for a name include that it be easy to spell if heard, and easy to say if read. Does it pass your uncommon name test?

Other names we have liked but discarded for one reason or another:

Micah
Wyatt

We actually like Wyatt, but I feel like if my son had a lisp, this could be an issue – Wyatt (R)othwell = Wyatt Wothwell…what do you think? I am staying away from all W names and all R names for the same reason, they just seem harder to say correctly. For example, Reed (R)othwell = Weed Wothwell with a lisp. And no, neither of us have a lisp, so I don’t know why I worry about it so much. As for Micah, I don’t like the nickname Mike, so I worry people will shorten it to that. Thus, I took it off our already short list. Plus, it seems to be a girl name, too, of which I’m not a big fan.

If we had a girl, the choices for her first and middle names would be:

Leila Ritchie
Leila Marie
Malia Ritchie

I am from Hawaii, though we live on the mainland now. I seem to only like girl Hawaiian names. These are easier to say and spell than many boy ones, so that’s probably why. Also, Ritchie is a family surname on my husband’s side.

Overall, we are avoiding really traditional names, and really uncommon ones (no Apple here). I also feel like we shouldn’t choose a first name that ends in an -en, -on, -an, etc, because of the middle name Steven. Do you agree? Meanings aren’t super important to us. I am not drawn to feminine boy names either. I do realize that I am sounding extremely picky, but I don’t want us to make the wrong choice! We plan on having two children.

Thank you so much for your help, I’m starting to panic since we haven’t been able to make a decision yet. The due date is so soon! Looking forward to seeing your suggestions.

 

When I read this the first time, I got to the part about the initials BSR and I thought, “Oh, I wonder if that’s a band or a brand or something?”—and then I got to “bull-sh*t-er” and STILL didn’t see it. Then, I had the letter in my name-blog spreadsheet, and I’d noted “BSR initials a problem?”—and I couldn’t remember what the problem was without re-reading the email. So I’d scratch that worry off the list.

I think I would also scratch off the worry about lisps, if you can: there would be so many speech impediments to allow for, and a child saying his own name wrong is a huge crowd-pleaser. If the name feels hard to say even without a speech impediment, though, I might cross it off.

I’d take the “ending in N” issue on a case-by-case basis; some combinations might sound bad to you, and others might sound good.

Brady is a moderately popular name: it was the 136th most popular boy name in the United States in 2012, and the popularity of the name Brayden/Braden may make Brady feel more common. Brady and Braden are falling in popularity; Brayden was steadily rising until 2011, and took its first little dip in 2012. It doesn’t seem too popular to me; I did a quick survey of the children currently at home, and only one of the three knew a Brady.

The name Brenner is very uncommon: only 64 new baby boys were given the name in 2012. It seems easy to spell and pronounce, and I’d think it would fit in well with other surname names.

Similar to Brady are Brody and Grady and Cade. I like Grady best: Grady Steven (R)othwell.

Similar to Brenner are Turner and Tanner and Connor and Carter. I like Turner best: Turner Steven (R)othwell.

Similar to Wyatt are Beckett and Bennett and Everett and Emmett and Garrett and Brett. I like Everett best: Everett Steven (R)othwell. But all the -tt names are a little hard for me to say with (R)othwell.

Similar to Brice are Blake and Brooks and Brett.

 

I don’t know if a Micah would be called Mike. I’ve only known two, both adults, and hadn’t thought of Mike as a nickname for them. It’s like Davis, for me: Dave OUGHT to be a perfectly naturally nickname for it, and certainly if I knew a Micah/Davis who went by Mike/Dave I would think that seemed understandable—and yet I never thought of Mike/Dave as nicknames for Micah/Davis until someone pointed out that they could be. Micah might rule out Malia later on, however.

Middle Name Challenge: Palmer _____ Ellis

Ashley writes:

I am due with our second baby girl in a month and we still don’t have a middle name picked out. Our first daughter is named Bexley Grace. We chose Bexley from a list of British surnames we saw. I like British, preppy sounding names that are not common but still sound like a name. We have chosen the name Palmer for this baby girl. Because we choose uncommon first names I think I’d like to stick with common middle names but not set on that. Names we have considered are Palmer Kate, Palmer Joy, and Palmer Faith. I don’t love any of those. Joy and Faith are only there bc our first daughters middle name is Grace. Other first names we love and considered were Emerson and Sloan. Sloan is too popular and my husband changed his mind on Emerson so that was a no go (still my number one choice though). But it doesn’t flow with Palmer as a middle name I don’t think. I also love the name Elle but our last name is Ellis so that’s a no go. I also love names like Isabella and Sophia but they don’t really fit with what we’ve got going so far I don’t think. Emma is another favorite. We also considered Hadley for our first daughter but don’t love that one this time.

I think it needs to either be 1 or 3 syllables in order to flow well.

My name is Ashley and my husbands name is John. I don’t care if the names flow with ours though. Any ideas on a good middle name for Palmer???

Thanks!

 

I like what you’ve set up with your first daughter: the unusual-surname first name with the familiar-and-feminine middle name. I would avoid a middle name starting with E, because of the initials PEE; I’d probably also prefer to avoid PIE, but less vigorously.

Palmer Kate/Faith/Joy all sound great to me, but if those aren’t quite right:

Palmer Anne Ellis
Palmer Beth Ellis
Palmer Brooke Ellis
Palmer Claire Ellis
Palmer Faye Ellis
Palmer Jade Ellis
Palmer Jane Ellis
Palmer Jean Ellis
Palmer Jo Ellis
Palmer Joan Ellis
Palmer June Ellis
Palmer Kay Ellis
Palmer Raine Ellis
Palmer Rose Ellis
Palmer Ruth Ellis
Palmer Skye Ellis
Palmer Sue Ellis

My favorites are Palmer Jane, Palmer Kay, and Palmer Rose.

I agree with you that longer names sound nice too. I’d like Palmer Elizabeth if it weren’t for the PEE initials.

Palmer Cassandra Ellis
Palmer Clarissa Ellis
Palmer Cordelia Ellis
Palmer Delaney Ellis
Palmer Jillian Ellis
Palmer Katherine Ellis
Palmer Lillian Ellis
Palmer Mackenzie Ellis
Palmer Madelyn Ellis
Palmer Michaela Ellis
Palmer Olivia Ellis (POE)
Palmer Sabrina Ellis
Palmer Savannah Ellis
Palmer Serenity Ellis
Palmer Sophia Ellis
Palmer Victoria Ellis
Palmer Vivian Ellis

Baby Naming Issue: How Do You Name a Second Child When the First Child’s Name Isn’t Your Style?

Linda writes:

I am hoping that you can help me with a naming problem. How do you name a second baby when the first baby’s name was very much a compromise name and not at all in the style that you wanted?

When we were naming our daughter 6 years ago, my husband suffered from the belief that we could only use names that were common when we were children. Since we were both born in the 1970s, that means he was thinking along the lines of Heather or Michelle. Those are very nice names, but not what I had in mind. After much debate we finally settled on Shannon Elizabeth “Denny”. I don’t love the name, but it is my daughter’s name and I can’t imagine her with a different one. At the time we were only planning on one child so the issue of sibling names never came up.

Now we are expecting again. I am not due until the end of February, but I really want to start looking at names. After 6 years of seeing names like Sofia and Olivia in my daughter’s classes, my husband has admitted that he had the wrong idea and this time is willing to basically let me choose the name. If it is a boy, I don’t think we will have much trouble as boys names haven’t changed as much over time. However, I am really stumped on girl names and don’t even know where to start looking.

I can’t really think of a naming category for Shannon except for “names that were popular in the 1970s” or possibly “sort of Irish names”. It seems like I would need to avoid anything ultra-feminine since Shannon used to be a unisex name and when talking about my children it might sound like I have a girl and a boy instead of two girls. Other than that, I really don’t know where to start and I was hoping you might be able to help. This will definitely be our last child, so I won’t need to try and co-ordinate a third name. Thank you so much!

 

I think one idea is to just choose the second girl name without taking the first name very much into consideration. This might not be the advice you’d expect to hear, considering how keen I am on sibling-name coordination. But I think if this time you choose a name YOU love, and the naming story became “Dad chose Shannon’s name, and I chose yours,” that that makes a very nice story and goes a long way to patch two quite different names together.

On the other hand, I always feel a little unhappy about the names of the Bush twins Barbara and Jenna: both names are good names, but the name Barbara is from the 1930s-1950s and so is not yet due for revival, while the name Jenna got popular right around the time the twins were born. Because the name Shannon is currently more often found on mothers than children (though it IS still being used for children, as is the name Barbara), I do think I’d look first for names that bridged the gap: there are girls my age and my daughter’s age named Elizabeth, Katherine, Anna, and Emily. That route appeals to me more than going with, say, Shannon and Isabella.

The name Shannon last peaked in the United States at #17 in 1976, so I would go to the Social Security website, scroll through 1976, and see what still sounds right for a little girl born today. Here are the ones I’d pick from the Top 100 of 1976:

Rebecca
Sarah
Elizabeth
Laura
Emily
Jill
Holly
Katherine
Megan
Leslie
Veronica
Heidi
Anna
Natalie
Samantha
Victoria

 

Some of those work better with Shannon than others: I like Shannon and Leslie, and I like Shannon and Holly, but Shannon and Anna are too similar in sound, and Shannon and Victoria might be too different in mood.

The 1976 list could also make a good starting place for more current versions of those names. Laura could lead us to Lauren, for example, or Amy to Amelia, or Julie to Julia. Or some of the names might remind us of other names: when I saw Jill, I thought Jillian might be great with Shannon, and Laura made me think of Maura and Nora and Morgan, and Leslie makes me think of Lindsay, and when I saw Holly I wondered if Molly might be perfect—and Molly made me think of Bridget, which made me think of Bethany. Etc.

My favorites are Jillian, Bethany, Bridget, Molly, Emily, Leslie, and Holly. It’s too bad so many of those are two syllables ending in a Y sound—I suspect they might not work at all well with your surname.

Do you remember which names you were campaigning for when you were expecting Shannon? That’s where I’d start, if I were you. Next, I’d look through name books and make a list of everything you like now, and add it to that older list. THEN, hold each name up to Shannon and see if it creates a Bush Twin Feeling or if it’s fine. I think this is a situation where I wouldn’t agitate too much about the names going well together, as long as neither child seems to have a “better” name. The age gap is on your side as well: it’s easy to see how the parents’ naming style could have shifted a bit in that time, and of course six years is long enough for the overall naming style to shift a bit as well.

It might also work to have Shannon help name the baby. The whole situation falls in a new light if she’s the one who chose the modern and ultra-feminine name.

 

 
Name update! Linda writes:

I wrote to you last summer asking for help coming up with another girl name that would go with my daughter’s name of Shannon (you posted it on July 12). I greatly appreciated your suggestions, and those of your readers. It made me feel a lot better to not have to try and restrict possible names to those that would match her name. Of course, this meant that we had a boy. Colin Thomas “Denny” was born on March 2. We let his sister make the final decision on his name, and we love it and think that it matches his sister’s name quite well. Thank you again for your help!

IMG_20140303_194334

Baby Girl Tower-with-a-Br, Sister to Lucia; A Longer Form for Mae/May

B. writes:

We’re having our second baby in November, and we are looking for names. Our last names rhymes with Tower, but starts with BR, and our daughter is named Lucia (pronounced Loo-SEE-ah) although we call her Lucy at least half the time. Her middle name is my maiden name, which will probably be the same for the next one. We won’t find out if we’re having a boy or a girl, but we’re making progress on the boy name (prob will be Theodore or Maxwell). The issue right now is with a girl name. We both are leaning toward May or Mae.

My issue with this name is that I think it might be too short to hold up to Lucia. I know it’s traditionally used as a nickname for Margaret or Mary, but I don’t really like either of those names. But I do really like the idea of having a name that comes with a nickname, so that we can use both names for the child. So I’ve been playing around with other names that we might use for a full name with May as the nickname.

Some ideas:
Maeve
This is a name I would love on someone else’s baby, but I’m just not sure that I love it enough for my own.

Maelys (Maa-ay-lees)
I think this is pretty. It’s very popular in France right now, which I think makes an interesting pair with Lucia which is very popular in Spain. But is it too out there for an American baby? I’m ok with a little confusion over a name (such as the Loo-see-ah/loo-sha questions we get) but is Maelys on a totally level? Also, does Mae even work as a nickname for this?

Maelyn
Pretty, but I think this is too much like Jalen/Kaylyn for me. I know a ton of kids with these names . . .

Maisie
Cute, but it already sounds like a nickname.

Marie
I really like this name, but I don’t know that May fits it as a nickname.

We don’t like Mariam, Marianne, and other similar names that sound like a form of Mary in some way.

Do you have any other suggestions?

Thanks!

 

At first my response was going to be essentially this: If the only reason you’re looking for a longer form for Mae is that you feel you ought to have more syllables to go with Lucia, and you’ve looked at a whole bunch of possibilities and you don’t like any of them as much as just Mae/May, then I think at this point you can stop looking. I too find it pleasing to have sibling names similar in length, but not to the point of choosing a name I like less—and Lucia is so short in number of letters, I think it’s just fine to pair it with Mae.

Then on re-reading, I noticed that it’s also that it appeals to you to have a name/nickname set, and that Lucia goes by Lucy at least half the time. Okay, then, that sounds like a fun mission instead of an obligation mission! But if we go through and list all the Mae-nickname names we can think of and nothing seems right, then I’ll go back to my original response about it being fine to go with just Mae. I think a nickname will evolve: in my house, I think she’d be Maeberry and Mae-mae and Maybe-baby within the first hour.

I think yes, Maelys is in a different category of pronunciation difficulty than Lucia. I listened to the Forvo pronunciation about a dozen times before I felt like I could remember how it was said—and that’s with the mnemonic of “It’s like ‘My Elise’, kind of,” and remembering the Elysian fields. And then on top of that, it’s supposed to have an umlaut over the E, and the Mae part is not pronounced like May. I think pronouncing it May for the nickname would considerably increase the difficulty others would have with the full version: if I got used to a little girl nicknamed Mae-pronounced-May, and then I saw her full name was Maelys, I’d pronounce it MAY-liss—like Marlys or Arlys.

My first inclination would be to go with a double first name. Ava May, or May Ella, or something of that sort. That does seem a little too Southern United States with Lucia, though.

Or Mayella could be a single name. It’s still Southern, and yet I like it with Lucia: the way they’re both three syllables with the accent on the second syllable ties them together a bit more, especially when I say them aloud.

There’s also Meagan, pronounced like MAY-gun. But that seems dated to me with Lucia, and the Mae nickname doesn’t feel natural for it.

Or Esmé (EHZ-may). That’s pretty with Lucia, and Twilight has increased the general familiarity with the pronunciation.

Mabel/Maebel/Maebella would be pretty too. Or maybe the B sounds are a little bumpy with the surname.

Maya is a possibility, though I always think of the MY-ah pronunciation first (I think because of the Mayans, and also because we know an Amaya pronounced ah-MY-ah).

 

More suggestions for long forms for Mae/May?

 

 

Name update! B. writes:

Sorry this update is so late . . . Life is a little crazier with two little ones.  We had just about settled on using the name Mae for a girl.  But we had a boy and named him Maxwell.  Thanks for all the help!