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64d64332d17c11e19ed51231381000d3 7 380x380 Do NOT confuse naming a baby with playing Scrabble

Mia Freedman

By MIA FREEDMAN

Dear Parents, stop it. Enough with the tricky spellings. Stop confusing your baby’s birth certificate with a game of Scrabble. It’s not funny, it’s not clever and it’s not fair. And also? Your children will resent you as soon as they’re old enough to explain “No, it’s Ambah – A-M-B-A-H”.

How to tell if the name you’ve picked for your child is a burden? If you have to add the words “pronounced” or “spelled” after writing or saying it. Yes, I’m talking to you, parents of Mykal, Krystyn, Annii, Kaetlan, Emmalie, Emilee, Emmalee, Emileigh, Jennipher, Jessyka, Allisenne, Grayss, Breighanna, Eion, Sophya, Taelor, Jaxxson, Ellivia, Kloe, Aaden, Ayden, Aydan, Aadanne, Kyly, Rubii, Jaydin, Eathan, Destyneigh, Morgyn, Zakkary, Ayvah, Aeva, Avah, Aevaeh, Ayva and Aiva.

And yes, these are all actual names of actual people. Poor, poor people.

Can we also agree on this: no child’s name needs an apostrophe in it. Under the terrifying heading “Apostrophe Creativity”, one baby naming website urges parents to, “Revamp a classic name with a little punctuational flair!”.  Let’s all take a moment to send our very best wishes to M’shell, L’oegan, Brook’Lynn, D’estiny, L’Wren, Cam’ron, Aa’Niyah, Sha’lee, Ky’Lee, Jo’Elle, Rach’Elle, O’Livia, Ma’Kayla, Ka’Ren, A’Driannah, Myr’Acle, A’Driannah and D’Shawn.

scrabble 380x282 Do NOT confuse naming a baby with playing Scrabble

You don’t get extra parenting points for using all the letters

As Dadspin blogger Drew Magary argues, “The abuse of apostrophes in names has to end. A reasonable person should be able to know, by looking at a name, when one syllable ends and another begins. But no, these parents have to be like “I’ll name him Raw’Bert.” You stop that. Give me some credit for being able to read even if you can’t.”

This has been a tough column to research. Don’t ever Google “unique baby names” because your eyes will start bleeding when you learn about ‘alphabet soup’  names such as ABC and XYZ. There are names with Roman numerals like K-VIII-lin (Caitlin). There are names with dashes like Sta-c. And names where the dashes are pronounced ‘dash’ like L-Sha (La-dash-a). I also discovered some alarming ways to spell my own simple name including Meah, Meigha and Meayah.

bekaa the shire Do NOT confuse naming a baby with playing Scrabble

Bekaa from The Shire

But WHY? Fear of common appears to be the biggest motivator. “My parents did it to be ‘interesting’ apparently”, a woman named Krystyne told me. “No reasons of heritage or tribute. ‘Christine’ was too boring, according to them.” And this: “My parents named me E’Van. They realised the error of tricky names and called my younger brother Alan.”

Lucky Alan.

Let’s be crystal (Krystyl?) clear: on the spectrum of bad things parents can do, tricky spelling is a mere trifle and must never be confused with ACTUAL harm. But where does this creeping trend come from?

Director of social research company IPSOS Mackay, Rebecca Huntley puts the tricky spelling down to “this general child obsession in our culture. Each child is unique but that doesn’t mean they need a crazy name. This is the Australian equivalent of ‘Apple’ and ‘Blue Ivy’, I suspect.” She also notes this grasping for ‘special’ is more common among lower socio-economic groups. “The middle classes do it but they tend to use last names as first names… Parker, Harrison etc.”

Blogger Drew Magary elaborates: “It’s not enough for your child to have a normal name and then try to stand out on their own merits down the road. No, no, no. Every parent now wants every child to be unique and special from the moment the doctor wipes the amniotic fluid off of it.  There’s a bizarre assumption that if you can make your child’s name unique, the child will be unique.”

Unique, maybe. Plagued by hassles, certainly. And there are other consequences in this digital age. NOBODY CAN FIND THEM ON FACEBOOK.

vernessa Do NOT confuse naming a baby with playing Scrabble

Vernessa from The Shire

A woman called Bluzette recently wrote about her name at CNN.com, explaining how much she hated it growing up and how she was forced to explain its unusual origins from age eight. As an adult, she’s made peace with it. Kind of. “At times for the sake of avoiding an uncomfortable conversation I use the name “Mary”, for instance, when I’m making a restaurant reservation. The thought of putting an employee through the pain of guessing how to spell and pronounce Bluzette just isn’t worth it.”

Multiply that by a few dozen times a week for life and you have a sense of the burden that baby Zaiden and his little mates Mychal and Tielar must bear.

People with unusual names suffer in similar ways. A woman called Open Weaver has this to say: “The thing people need to realize when naming their children is that unique can also be a burden when it subjects them to ridicule or makes getting through the average day difficult because of the number of times you have to explain or spell it. And parents cannot predict their children’s personalities or futures. So while “Open” might have been great if I’d grown up to be an artist, it’s not so great for a 37 year old attorney who sometimes would just like to be taken seriously when I introduce myself, rather than have to explain for the umpteenth time “My mother just liked the way it sounded.”

The moral of the story: don’t vomit the alphabet onto your baby’s birth certificate. You don’t have to use all the letters to make them unique.

Check out some of these ‘alternate’ spellings…….

Abigail

And to find the origin and meaning of baby names, check out iVillage’s Baby Name Finder.

What’s your take on names with unusual spellings?

 

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496 Comments so far

  1. Faybian

    Ill be up front. I can’t stand Destiny as a name anyway, stupid variations aside. Too much opportunity for sh*t stirring. “it is your destiny” in a darth badger style voice etc.
    Don’t like Neveah either, or Blaze, or any of the alphabet soup names. I pity the kids lumbered with them.
    I don’t mind unusual, or traditional names, but enough already people. I like what I’ve heard Dr Phil (I know, I know) say to people.
    “in all the history of the world, there has never been another you, nor will there ever be. You are completely unique”, or similar. You don’t need a silly name to prove that.

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    • Faybian

      Gaaarh, won’t let me edit again. That’s darth vader, NOT badger. Made me think of a badger wearing the helmet.

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      • goldie

        Darth Badger, now that would make a great name!!!

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    • Elise

      Hehe I know a guy called Blaze, his father is a fireman named Wally.

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      • Mishko

        Blaze I also a traditional Macedonian name, pronounced Blah-zeh

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    • Anonymous

      Unnusual names : Blue
      Tequila
      Dee Jay
      Jimmy Barnes( no not the singer)
      Kind
      Sunday
      Munday (as in Monday)
      Tuff (as in tough)
      Brainy
      Sunny
      Rum (as in the drink)
      Melena ( as in medical name for black bowel motion)

      Parents, please Think about the implications for your child when you name them.

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      • sharoncello

        Have you seen Melena written down?? Melina is a greek name meaning honey :)

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        • Anonymous

          Maelena is medical word for black bowel motions

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          • sharoncello

            ummm…really? I googled it and maelena seems to be an uncommon (possibly ancient) spelling of melena.

            My question stands – have you ever seen anyone’s name written as Melena? Or are you confusing homonyms?

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          • Rive

            I think you mean “melæna” not “maelena”. Ha.

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            • sharoncello

              Haha Rive & thanks :)

              I should have thought of that…I’m usually pretty good at remembering (or working out) where an “ae” should be in a word – this one slipped past me!

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        • Anonymous

          My apologies, l spelt it incorrectly! BTW is your name Melena?

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          • sharoncello

            No, you didn’t…

            “melena” is a medical term meaning black bowel motion.

            “Melina” is a Greek name meaning honey.

            I have had a couple of friends named Melina (I have never seen the name spelled as Melena). My name is Sharon.

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    • sharoncello

      Whenever I hear/see the name Destiny the following plays in my head: “Lorraine, I am your density” :D

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  2. Sara

    Amen to this, Mia. I found it hard enough growing up with people calling me Sarah and never being able to find my name printed on a mug or keyring. How often I waited for Miss Helena to say my name through her magic mirror on Romper Room – and my name isn’t nearly as unique as your list.

    This is why my children’s names are Amelia, Christopher, Nicholas, James and Daniel. They each have a mug AND a keyring with their names on. :)

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    • Sara

      …and, if you haven’t seen it, YouTube-search “top 60 ghetto names” for a giggle.

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    • Anonymous

      My name is also Sara, and I have learnt to ignore that people spell it Sarah. It’s not worth the extra 10 minutes explaining why my parents chose that spelling. It’s actually getting better, people still spell it with the h but it is getting pronounced correctly :)
      I could pass as a parent that is cruel to their children, I have a daughter Rylee, and another daughter Zali. They are different but I wouldn’t say cruel or stupid spelling. And they both have a good friend in their class with the same name and we are in regional Vic not a city.

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      • charmaine

        my cousin has a Rylee (girl) i have a nephew Riley

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  3. Anonymous

    Mia, I am a huge fan of yours. i have son named Jay and daughter named Sammy. I guarantee someone has just read those names and thought: ‘you poor little bastard/s’. I know the names of your three kids and really like two of those names. It’s such personal choice x

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  4. Mother of 3 boys

    We have given our 3 sons pretty traditional and mainstream names because they’re the names we love. That said, I do not agree with public condemnation of the choices of other people.

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    • Anonymous

      Unfortunately Most of us will have a giggle at misspelt names. It is human nature and Mia is just being honest about what most of us think. Poor child.

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  5. Ali C

    As the proud mother of Alexander, Lachlan & Katherine (Alex, Lachie & Katie)

    I DO NOT GET IT.

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  6. Mum a Brown

    You must remember, one day you will need to yell, stretch or scream that name and preferably the middle name with it ( just incase some other kid has the same name in the plaground, intersection as they step out into traffic, or when you have lost them in woollies, dead set I o ly turned around a second ago). So pick something that sounds really good when you need to use your mummy voice ( you get that with the injection of mummy guilt after birth) as scream it out!

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  7. MrsBananaFarmer

    Our 10 month son is named Ben – just Ben, and I’ve had to explain that to a number of people… why not Benjamin?? Our next child if a girl will be Kate – just Kate and a boy will be Liam.I believe that for the sake of my children I want them to have names that are not hard to spell or pronounce for their sake and everyone wanting to associate with them, no, they are not names that `stand out’ but this does not mean that my children will not `stand out’, children are special because they are simply special. Having a `stand out’ name is just unfair.

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    • Miss Molly

      I really like all these names. My son is Max. Just Max. :)

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    • Jimmy's Girl

      Aren’t Ita Buttrose’s children Kate and Ben?

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    • anon for this

      My name is Kate. Just Kate. I can’t begin to count the number of people who say “it can’t be just Kate……are you sure it isn’t short for Katherine, Kathy, Caitlin….?”

      Yes, I’m sure. I even have two elderly neighbours who insist on calling me Katherine. I gave up saying “actually it’s just plain Kate” and started answering to Katherine……..then one neigbour started shortening it to Kathy! Can’t win!

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  8. Natasha

    You mostly find people in low economic areas fiddling with the spelling of names. it is very rare in affluent areas. Worse still they not only change the spelling they seem to gravitate towards made up names too. Poor unfortunate child.

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    • Anonymous

      OMG …. “you mostly find people in low economic areas fiddling with the spelling of names” …

      ARE YOU FOR REAL?

      There must be a lot of people running around “affluent areas” called Sharon.

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      • Natasha

        Most people from affluent areas choose classic names, Oliver, Thomas, Francesca, Ava ( spelt correctly) Charlotte, vs Tyronnee , kaylah, shaylah , jaydenne, etc.

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        • Shazza

          Really? And most people who live in affluent areas have ‘classic’ hyphenated surnames (spelt correctly) too. Fergus Fitzroy-Ferguson, Thomas Taylor-Thomas, Henry Harvey-Henry…. I don’t mind classic or hyphenated names by the way.
          Something about your comment does not sit well with me. It made me cringe a little. I’m not sure why. But each to their own…

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          • ClaireC

            Natasha’s comment might make you cringe, but it’s true.

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      • sharoncello

        gah…I’m living in the wrong area :P

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    • Guest

      The people in affluent areas go for pretentious. Persephone, Remy, Sascha, Atticus, Porsche, Harley, Rupert…..

      Nothing wrong with any of the above by the way…but none I would consider for my kids and not likely to turn up in a family with a Mykayla either.

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      • Diana The Huntress

        There is no way anyone educated would name their kid Porsche. It’s the kind of name a nouveau-bogan gives their child in a misguided effort to appear classy an’ that. Think Dior, Chanel, Paris…

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        • leaf

          How about Portia De Rossi who evidently decided to give herself a more interesting name than the one her parents chose…….Amanda Rogers.

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    • sharoncello

      hmmm…you write this as if you have done a large amount of research…or are you just making generalisations??

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  9. Cazzie

    Both our boys do have unusual names, (Cadell and Griffyn), chosen by their father Grayson. I am ok with it and so are they. To be honest,some of the names that I have seen in Kindy are way more unusual than my boys

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    • MrsBananaFarmer

      Cazzie, Cadell and Griffyn sound pretty normal (and nice too) based on the findings in this article :)

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    • Mummabrown

      I love Grayson as a name, sigh. You couldn’t yell that name in woollies!

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    • anon

      grayson is my maiden name:)

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  10. Soozy

    I’m all for traditional spellings like Tadgh,Eoin, Siobhan etc, but those crazy spellings do my head in. I do netball regsitrations each year for my club and I can’t understand why seemingly otherwise sensible people do it to their kids. Have you heard the one about the girl with the name pronounce Cer – Oh – sonn – nee? it’s spelled Kerosene.

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    • Siobhan

      My family is Irish and we adore the name Tadhg, which ended up being my sons middle name. Funnily enough, at the hospital all the nurses and Drs pronounced it correctly (most knew of it due to Sydney Swans player Tadhg Kennelly). His first name, which isn’t that complicated, got spelt a million different ways. You can’t win!

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      • Miss

        How do you pronounce ‘Tadhg’? I’m intrigued!

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        • Siobhan

          It is pronounced ‘tige’ like you are saying tiger without the r

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          • Miss

            Oh that’s lovely!

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      • Katie Dee

        I used to work with a woman whose mother had been in a little car Bingle with another driver called Siobahn, not knowing how to spell it, this woman’s younger sister was called Shivon!

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      • Anonymous

        Siobhan is my list of names for this baby. I have a really Irish surname so would like something traditional to go along with it. SO pretty!

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    • Zelicat

      I have not only heard it, I have MET a lady called kerosene. Yes, pronounced Ke ROZ ne. I met her in Canberra a couple of months ago.

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      • soozy

        I was so sure it was an urban myth – especially as I was told it in a winery in the Hunter. LOL.
        My partner’s side of the family have some interesting names – Shardonnay, Kallister, Trystyn. But then my side has gone for traditional Irish names Eibhlin and Siobhan.

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  11. Ella

    The image of the attorney having to introduce herself: “Hi, I’m Open!” LOL to that!

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  12. YoungVintage

    This is so timely for me… My husband is a high school teacher and last week I helped him with marking assignmentsand here are the first 5 of names I came across:

    Nyssa
    Jahren
    Melyssa
    Jamey
    Seren

    …WTF?!

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    • Lol

      Seren is actually quite an old welsh name. But yeah >< there is a girl at my daughters school named 'Versace' and one named& #039;Revere'…

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    • Cold

      Nyssa is the name of a character from Doctor Who! I think it might be Greek, though.

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  13. Nikki

    My sons name is tadhg pronounced tige. It is an old Irish name meaning traveling poet and my husband is of Irish descent. Yes he will always have to spell it but I’m not precious about it being mispronounced or spelt. As my aunt said she constantly has to spell her name ann. It suits him and I’m bringing him up to be confident enough to tell ppl his name himself.

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    • Cold

      He might well have the confidence but he’ll need it to cope with the constant irritation. I have to spell my last name for people, have done for 40 years. It’s annoying. And you might not be precious over the spelling but he might grow up to be.

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      • Anonymous

        but that can happen even if you have one of the commonest names around – as a Sarah with an h – and am surprised at the crazy spellings that people come up with for my name! and I have always hated my name – and wished that i had a name that I didn’t share with half the class.. 20 years out of school and I still haven’t grown to like it.

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    • Louise

      Ultimately, its not your name though.

      Even if it is a traditional name it still causes children to get frustrated. My mum’s name is Angelique , pronounced the traditional French way of On-shjeh-leek because that’s where they came from but it causes trouble for her in Australia

      I wonder if traditional ways of spelling names will make a comeback – I could be Labhoise

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    • Princess

      My daughter’s name is BetseyAnn, I am constantly having to let people know there is no “e” on the end……even simple names can be hard for some people, I think people expect complicated spellings.
      My son is AJ, the spellings and pronunciations of his name are hysterical.
      Both are modern twists on family names, Arthur John and Ann.
      We like them.

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      • anon

        my daughter is Zoe gets spelt Zoey. Son is Leigh it gets spelt Lee. Our last name has four letters and it needs to get spelt but it is an everyday common word:)

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      • Kaz

        Is your real name Princess?
        I teach a Princess and when she introduces herself people don’t take her seriously.

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    • Faybian

      I have a Shannon who is also of Irish descent. The biggest problem we had when he was a boy was the fad for naming girls Shannen because of 90210, the series. A lot of people that hadn’t laid eyes on him assumed he was a girl. He eventually became aware of it and I had to show him where it sat in a naming book and that it is a river and airport in Ireland.
      He doesn’t have any dramas any more though.

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    • Siobhan

      My family is Irish and my sons middle name is Tadhg, we love it, but I was worried that he would have to constantly correct the spelling etc. as I posted before, his first name is fairly easy to pronounce and spell (so we thought) but even the easiest names can still be misspelt or mispronounced!

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  14. Sharon Stewart

    So true. Chose unusual names for my kids, but I made sure they were actual names and gave them the most straightforward spelling. However, unfortunately the youngest has alternative spellings and I called him Euan. Don’t mind when he gets alternative spellings but don’t like it when he is called Evan. This even happened on his hospital card. OMG. Evan indeed!

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