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A Girl named Girl

| Baby Names, How I got my name, Iceland, Name Experts, Name Stories, Press | January 5, 2013

Girl

By Anna Andersen, The Associated Press

REYKJAVIK, Iceland — Call her the girl with no name.

A 15-year-old is suing the Icelandic state for the right to legally use the name given to her by her mother. The problem? Blaer, which means “light breeze” in Icelandic, is not on a list approved by the government.

Like a handful of other countries, including Germany and Denmark, Iceland has official rules about what a baby can be named. In a country comfortable with a firm state role, most people don’t question the Personal Names Register, a list of 1,712 male names and 1,853 female names that fit Icelandic grammar and pronunciation rules and that officials maintain will protect children from embarrassment. Parents can take from the list or apply to a special committee that has the power to say yea or nay.

Girl

In Blaer’s case, her mother said she learned the name wasn’t on the register only after the priest who baptized the child later informed her he had mistakenly allowed it.

“I had no idea that the name wasn’t on the list, the famous list of names that you can choose from,” said Bjork Eidsdottir, adding she knew a Blaer whose name was accepted in 1973. This time, the panel turned it down on the grounds that the word Blaer takes a masculine article, despite the fact that it was used for a female character in a novel by Iceland’s revered Nobel Prize-winning author Halldor Laxness

Given names are even more significant in tiny Iceland than in many other countries: Everyone is listed in the phone book by their first names. Surnames are based on a parent’s given name. Even the president, Olafur Ragnar Grimsson, is addressed simply as Olafur.

Blaer is identified as “Stulka” — or “Girl” — on all her official documents, which has led to years of frustration as she has had to explain the whole story at the bank, renewing her passport and dealing with the country’s bureaucracy.

Her mother is hoping that will change with her suit, the first time someone has challenged a names committee decision in court. Though the law has become more relaxed in recent years — with the name Elvis permitted, inspired by the charismatic rock and roll icon whose name fits Icelandic guidelines — choices like Cara, Carolina, Cesil, and Christa have been rejected outright because the letter “c” is not part of Iceland’s 32-letter alphabet.

Full international coverage from NBC News

“The law is pretty straightforward so in many cases it’s clearly going to be a yes or a no,” said Agusta Thorbergsdottir, the head of the committee, a panel of three people appointed by the government to a four-year term.

Other cases are more subjective.

“What one person finds beautiful, another person may find ugly,” she acknowledged. She pointed to “Satania” as one unacceptable case because it was deemed too close to “Satan.”

‘Basic human right’
The board also has veto power over people who want to change their names later in life, rejecting, for instance, middle names like Zeppelin and X.

Eidsdottir says she is prepared to take her case all the way to the country’s Supreme Court if a court doesn’t overturn the commission decision on Jan. 25.

“So many strange names have been allowed, which makes this even more frustrating because Blaer is a perfectly Icelandic name,” Eidsdottir said. “It seems like a basic human right to be able to name your child what you want, especially if it doesn’t harm your child in any way.”

“And my daughter loves her name,” she added.

http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/03/16320630-teen-legally-known-only-as-girl-battles-to-use-her-own-name?lite

 

Did you unwittingly name your baby after a hurricane?

| Baby Names, How I got my name, Name Experts, Name Stories | September 27, 2012

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Hurricanes. They destroy homes and take lives. They cost billions of dollars in damage. And they force our hands in the assigning of names to our offspring. Wait, what was that last part?

Yes, according to a recently published study in Psychological Science, hurricanes names can boost the popularity of corresponding baby names. Well, sort of. It’s complicated.

The study – which additionally examined overall changes in frequency of baby names in the United States during the past century – didn’t just looks at hurricane names, it also considered names with shared units of sound, or phonemes. Because, as it turns out, names with shared phonemes affect each other’s popularity. If the name Jacob is having a good year, for instance, this may bode well for names like Jason and James in upcoming years, and vice versa. The more phonemes two names have in common, the more their usage rises and falls in unison.*

Image: ariel design.

Fine, fine. Sometimes J names are popular and other times it’s K names or D names or whatever. But what does this have to do with hurricanes? Well, the authors of the study attribute the correlation in popularity of sound-alike names to a psychological phenomenon called the mere-exposure effect. Perhaps you’ve heard of it? It’s one of a long list of cognitive biases that cause our species to think and do things that aren’t especially logical. The mere-exposure effect is the tendency for people to look more favorably on the familiar. Simply being exposed enough times to a sound or word or image renders it more likable. (As you can imagine, this is the basis for plenty of advertising campaigns.) So a predominance of names with a particular phoneme makes that phoneme more common, which makes it sound more pleasing, which makes us more likely to select names containing that phoneme when tasked with the naming a of child. For the most part, this just means that sound-alike names increase in popularity together until we hear them so much that they become tedious and we turn our attention to some less overused phoneme.

But hurricanes are also given human names, which come from a rotating set of listsmaintained by the World Meteorological Organization (six lists in all for Atlantic tropical storms). If a hurricane is destructive enough to spend weeks or months in the news, we’re bombarded not just by its wind gusts and rain but also by its phonemes. These sounds become familiar, even pleasing. See where this is going?

By sifting through the use frequency of thousands of baby names and about sixty years of storm data, researchers found that in years following prominent (i.e., costly) hurricanes, while use of the specific name of the hurricane might take a dive due to negative associations (Katrina dropped over a hundred spots on the top 1000 list after its stormy namesake ravaged the southeastern U.S.) phonemically similar names experience a boost in popularity. The study reported a 9% increase in the frequency of names beginning with a K bestowed upon babies following Hurricane Katrina.

Of course, weather isn’t the only factor impacting name choice. Celebrities, movies, pop songs and other assorted media can also contribute to the fashionability of certain names. But those variables will have to wait their turn for some future investigation.

It might interest you to know that the authors of the study do not operate out of their university’s psychology department, but rather its business school. Their goal is to uncover patterns that predict the path of cultural evolution, which could in turn predict which products will succeed and which will fail. They don’t really care what you name your baby, they’re more interested in how the popularity of the iPad will affect iPhone, or possibly the number of people dining at IHOP. Business stuff. Baby names just make a good experimental model for examining how trends change, because – unlike products that can be more or less well designed and promoted – names are theoretically neutral in value. Whatever your personal tastes may be, there’s nothing inherently superior about the names Isabella and Jayden (the 2011 chart toppers for New York City’s fashion forward babies), and no company earns royalties if a particular name dominates birth certificates.

But that shouldn’t stop you from having a philosophical crisis and questioning the existence of free will. If hurricanes are naming our children, what other “decisions” might be swayed by forces beyond our control? And don’t forget that this stormy manipulation of monikers affects more than just babies. Our pets, boats, and fictional characters need names too. Perhaps it’s best not to leave these important decisions to our faulty, cognitively biased human brains. Naming is clearly a job for computers. Which is why, should I someday decide to adopt a cat or dog, I will be christening it using this random name generator I found on the internet. It lets you set the level of obscurity, and even gives you last names. “Here, Marcellus Macvicar, dinnertime!”

* The effect was much stronger in the first phonemes of names than subsequent ones. Which means that the popularity of “Jason” may affect that of “Jacob”, but it won’t do much for “Allison”.

 If you want to play along at home, here’s the U.S. Social Security database that I’m using.

 By the way, as more and more people finish their copy of Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow, you should brace yourself for a continuing deluge of articles explaining how thoroughly irrational we all are.

Wedding Season – Some names better left uncombined?

| Bad names, How I got my name, Name Experts, Name Stories | May 26, 2012

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 ”What’s in a name?” Shakespeare’s Juliet rhetorically asked, deciding that her beloved Romeo’s surname mattered not.

The couples featured in the slideshow below clearly must have had the same opinion as Juliet. However, while Romeo and Juliet’s surnames only brought them tragedy, the names of these seemingly mismatched pairs are pure comedy.

Click through the following wedding and engagement announcements and vote for the surname wordplay that you think is most hilarious. Did you spot an unfortunate last name online or in your local paper? Let us know in the comments! Via Huffington Post Weddings

Wedding name fails

 

What’s in a town name?

| How I got my name, Name Experts, Name Stories, Press | May 10, 2012

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It was a simple wish, living my entire life in NYC and spending years traveling mostly for business and mostly abroad I came to the realization that I hadn’t seen enough of my homeland.  I wanted to see AMERICA…real AMERICA, the wild west, the deep south, one traffic light towns and farmland.  So with the flexibility of time off and kids too young to argue with us, my family hit the road for an ultimate road trip (see http://camproadtrip.blogspot.com/2010/07/for-summer-of-2010-me-and-my-family.html for my 12 year old’s take on it).  We covered more than 5,000 miles and 26 states (I’m now only 2 states short of my bucket list 50) drinking in the local culture of every town we hit.  We marveled at the names – Badlands, Painted Desert, Kill Devil Hills, Promised Land and thought there must be great stories behind some of these.  When I came across this article in USA today I couldn’t help but smile.  Enjoy.

What’s in a town name? Pure Americana

By Rick Hampson, USA TODAY

Photo By Eileen Blass, USA TODAY

Imagine the map without names like Lazbuddie, Texas; Bowlegs, Okla.; or Braggadocio, Mo.; or the West Virginia towns of Left Hand and Cucumber, of Odd and of Shock.

There’s not much to eat in Grubville, Mo., or to see in Art, Texas, but those names are a feast for the eyes. Life sounds sweet in Honeydew, Calif., and Beetown, Wis. Just from its name you know Dwarf, Ky., is a little town.

You’d be crazy not to miss Battiest, Okla. Who’s deaf to the poetry of Bergoo (W.Va.), Wikieup (Ariz.) and Mizpah (Minn.). Or immune to the intrigue suggested by settlements named Chinese Camp, Calif., and Panther Burn, Miss.?

The Postal Service, which loses about $36 million a day, wants to close more than 3,700 smaller post offices (more than a tenth of the national total) in these and other communities. Although some will survive, and although a town that loses its post office doesn’t necessarily disappear, postal closings will hasten the homogenization of our national map.

Unusual local place names, often chosen by pioneer settlers to make a joke, mark an occasion or grind an axe, are slowly being squeezed out by ones fabricated by developers to market real estate, according to Mike Hill of the North Carolina Office of Archives and History.

Provocative old monikers will not soon disappear. But over time fewer settlements will be called things such as Zap, N.D., Jay Em, Wyo., and Fisty, Ky. — all post offices slated for closing. And more will have synthetic names that spell harbor with a “u” and town with an “e.”

Hill calls this process “suburban swallow up;” colorfully named places are slowly eased out by subdivisions, some named after the natural features (Bretton Woods) or creatures (Grouse Run) they obliterate or displace.

“For the most part,” he says, “we stopped making good new place names a long time ago.”

Many strangely named old communities are fading. Although the U.S. population increased almost 10% between 2000 and 2010, it dropped in many places faced with a post office closing, including Chinese Camp, Braggadocio and Mizpah, as well as Quail, Texas; Driftwood, Pa.; Crowheart, Wyo.; Alligator, Miss.; Coin, Iowa; Zwingle, Iowa; Maxbass, N.D.; Muddy, Ill.; Bone Gap, Ill.; and Umpire, Ark.

Many others increased less than the national average, including Rosie, Ark.; Bromide, Okla.; Stout, Iowa; and Krypton, Ky. With 90 residents, the future is dim in the West Virginia coal town of Twilight.

These names tell stories from a wilder, younger country, one of gunfighters and moonshiners, cowboys and Indians, miners and trappers, of tent revivals and covered wagons. They aspire (Ideal, Ga.), boast (Admire, Kan.) and exaggerate (Pep, Texas, is a sleepy town that’s never had a population above 100). Recluse, Wyo., lamented the distance between its post office and its ranches.

Their loss would be our loss. As the writer H.L. Mencken observed, the U.S. map is dotted with “examples of the most daring and charming fancy.” Poet Steven Vincent Benet agreed: “I have fallen in love with American names.”

We love our place names so much that we steal them.

In Bug Tussle, a dusty crossroads on the plains of North Texas, the highway markers have been stolen so many times — around 70, according to residents — that the state has stopped spending the $500 it costs to replace one.

When a Bug Tussle sign was hung on the empty general store that used to house the post office (which closed in 1894), someone stole that, too.

From fraternity boys to curio collectors, “everyone loves that name,” says Jan Allen, one of about 15 local residents, who markets a salsa with the Bug Tussle brand. “They have to have it.”

‘Dull dogs,’ those Englishmen

America’s English colonizers had no knack for names. They memorialized what George Rippey Stewart, author of the magisterial Names on the Land, called “the periwigged Lords of London,” who did nothing for America “to deserve the naming of so much as an outhouse.”

Mencken decried the “unimaginative town names of the New England Puritans. … The early English settlers were dull dogs, and very few of the names they bestowed upon the land showed any imagination.” Exhibit A: Plymouth Rock.

Or they adopted Indian names, which sound funny (Exhibit B: Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J.) only to those unfamiliar with the language.

With exceptions such as Intercourse and Bird-in-Hand,, Pa., it was not until Americans moved west that they rolled up their sleeves and produced the names that still enchant. And they did so, notes Frank Gallant, author of a book on U.S. place names, “without worrying what people back East would think.”

Behind almost every off-beat name is a story or legend (usually several, often conflicting). Few are wholly plausible; fewer are verifiable. Many involve a post office.

Sweet Home, Texas, got its name before the Civil War when settler Solomon West moved his family from Alabama to 2,200 acres along Mustang Creek in Lavaca County. “Pa, this would be a sweet home!” his daughter Mary exclaimed.

Battiest, Okla., was named for a Choctaw Indian judge. Bowlegs was a Seminole family surname. Braggadocio, according to Our Storehouse of Missouri Place Names, referred to the comic knight Sir Braggadoccio in Edmund Spenser’s epic poem, The Faerie Queene. Chinese Camp was a segregated mining town.

Many frontier settlements had no formal name, just whatever people called them, often because of a geologic formation or general store. But when it was time to apply for a local postal branch, someone had to write something down and send it to the Post Office Department in Washington.

There were more than twice as many postal branches in 1900 as today, and many names were rejected because other post offices in the state already had them.

Otherwise, Pep, Texas, would still be the less energetic Ludwig; Likely, Calif., would be the generic South Fork; Sacul — “Lucas” spelled backwards — would be Lucas, Texas, in honor of a town father with that surname.

Lazbuddie, in the Texas Panhandle, is named for Luther “Laz” Green and Andrew “Buddie” Sherley, who started the general store in which the post office opened in 1926 and operates today.

Nowthen, Minn., supposedly was so named in the 1890s because its first postmaster had the habit of saying, “Now, then …” What is today Peculiar, Mo., (“Where the ‘odds’ are with you”) had several names rejected as duplicates. Finally, the postmaster told the U.S. postmaster general, “We don’t care what name you give us so long as it is sort of peculiar.” He probably meant “unusual.”

Several U.S. towns are Nameless. After the one in Texas failed to get Post Office approval of six suggested names, someone wrote Washington in 1880: “Let the post office be nameless and be damned!” Done!

Today, as the result of proposed closings, several towns could lose the very post offices that helped give them their names. Odd, W.Va., the story has it, was named when residents gathered to name the post office and one said of another’s suggestion, “That’s odd!”

Similarly, Art, Texas, was Plehweville until World War I. Then the Post Office ordered a new name, because chronic misspelling of the old one was leading to lost mail. Postmaster Eli Dechart renamed it — with the last three letters of his surname.

From Romance to Hell

If fans of America’s peculiarly named communities are worried about the future, it’s because so many already have disappeared.

Four different Missouri settlements called Hog Eye were renamed something more dignified, and one in Texas simply disappeared. Skunktown, N.J., a market for skunk pelts, prettied itself up as Sergeantsville in 1827 when the post office opened. Bugscuffle, Texas, became Valley Spring for the same reason in 1878.

The California mining town of Dry Diggings, aka Hangtown, became Placerville in 1854 at the behest of temperance activists and church members. (Dry Diggings referred to how miners moved cartloads of dry soil to running water to separate gold.)

But a catchy name also can be a ticket to survival.

Many communities have name that allure. They include Frostproof, Fla., (which really isn’t); the nation’s 12-plus Paradises and 25-odd Edens; and Fertile, Minn., whose farmland may be rich but whose post office could be closing.

Frank Gallant, author of APlace Called Peculiar: Stories About Unusual American Place Names, says “some small towns have always done whatever they could to attract attention.” That includes trading on a distinctive postmark.

Romance, Ark., allegedly was named by a teacher who found the view from the town’s bluffs romantic. Now, each Valentine’s Day the local post office issues a specially designed postmark. Annually, it handles about 7,500 valentines and wedding invitations sent from around the world to receive the postmark.

People even come there to get married; a minister and a justice of the peace are standing by.

At the other end of the lexicon is the summer recreation hamlet of Hell, Mich. (five hours south of Paradise, Mich.)

Local people disagree on whether its name stems from the mosquitoes, swamps and thickets encountered by settlers; or from a German traveler who remarked one sunny day, “So schön hell!” — “So beautifully bright!”; or from a town father who, asked what to call it, replied, “Name it Hell for all I care.”

The town leverages its nominal connection to the hereunder. The annual car show features hearses, and a road race is called the “Run Through Hell.” You can slurp ice cream at a parlor called Screams; eat at Hell’s Kitchen; buy an “I’ve been thru Hell and back” T-shirt at the Hell in a Hand Basket Country Store.

The store also sells Hell-themed post cards (including “Wish you were here”) with singed edges, which can be mailed with the hand-stamped postmark “Hell Rural Station — Have a Hell of a day.”

Ask Karen Haigh, the store manager, if it’s true that some people come to get the infamous postmark on their tax returns and divorce papers. Her reply: “Hell, yeah!”

 

Suu Kyi – A New name for Democracy

| Famous Names, How I got my name, Press, Publicity | April 1, 2012

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YANGON, Myanmar (AP) — Supporters of Myanmar’s opposition icon Aung San Suu Kyi erupted in euphoric cheers Sunday after her party said she won a parliamentary seat in a landmark election, setting the stage for her to take public office for the first time.
The victory would mark a major milestone in the Southeast Asian nation, where the military has ruled almost exclusively for a half-century and where a new reform-minded government is seeking legitimacy and a lifting of Western sanctions.
It would also mark the biggest prize of Suu Kyi’s political career, and a spectacular reversal of fortune for the 66-year-old Nobel Peace Prize laureate who the former junta had kept imprisoned in her lakeside home for the better part of two decades.
And now a little about her name:  Aung San Suu Kyi is derived from three relatives: “Aung San” from her father, “Suu” from her paternal grandmother and “Kyi” from her mother Khin Kyi. She is frequently called Daw Aung San Suu Kyi. Daw is not part of her name, but is an honorific, similar to madame, for older, revered women, literally meaning “aunt.”  She is also often referred to as Daw Suu by the Burmese (or Amay Suu, lit. “Mother Suu,” by some followers), or “Aunty Suu”, and as Dr. Suu Kyi,  Ms. Suu Kyi, or Mrs. Suu Kyi by the foreign media.  However, like other Burmese, she has no surname. The pronunciation of her name is approximated as “Awn Sahn Sue Chee,” although the “ch” in “Chee” is unaspirated.  Let’s celebrate a new name in our world history.

Tell us how you got your name

| How I got my name, Name Experts, Name Stories | March 29, 2012

Jolie, Angelina Jolie, How I got my name

I’ll go first.   My name is Jolie.  Quite unusual at the time I was born but thanks to Angelina, it has now become more popular and at least easier for people to pronounce.   My grandparents were named Josephine and Leo and my parents thought the combination would honor them both.  Okay who else has a story to tell…

With my name I could have been a stripper

| Famous Names, How I got my name, Name Experts, Stripper names | March 25, 2012

January Jones, Mad Men, could have been a stripper, entertainment news

Well, headlines don’t get more provocative than this.  And with Mad Men back after a long hiatus, January Jones tells the story of her name in this article.  I was a fan of the book and of the name January and of course of Mad Men…

January Jones, Mad Men, could have been a stripper, entertainment news

January Jones

http://tinyurl.com/87ak77f