In my community, a newborn baby is named after the last beloved relative, of the same gender, to pass away. Thus I was called Helen after my late grandmother Hinde, and my son was called Peter in honour of my beloved grandfather Pinchas. The only argument between the spouses is usually which grandparent to honour first.
Although it was only 12 years ago, I was interested to read the names we gave to our newborn babies back in 2012. Now I have read McCrindle Research NSW reported the following 10 most popular names for baby boys and girls in Australia, as chosen in 2024.
Oliver
Noah
Henry
Leo
Theodore
Hudson
Luca
William
Charlie
Jack
Isla
Amelia
Charlotte
Olivia
Mia
Ava
Matilda
Harper
Lily
Hazel
Oliver continued its 11-year reign as the #1 boy’s name in Australia with 1,906 occurrences and has now been on top for 11 years. While Oliver’s total number of occurrences in the top ten reduced since 2022, Oliver is still the #1 baby name overall. Demonstrating the popularity of this name, the shortened nickname Ollie has now entered the top 100 in its own right, debuting at #84.
The top baby girl name was contested between Isla and Charlotte for a number of years, but Isla is back at #1 with 1,249 occurrences. Isla has been particularly popular among parents of Generation Alpha, as Isla was in position #34 in 2010 at the conception of Generation Alpha and made her way to the top ten by 2016. Ever since, she has consistently been hovering at the top. Harper makes another entrance into the top ten, having featured in 2017, 2018 and 2019, while Hazel makes her debut to the top ten after residing in the top 100 since 2014 (debuting at #88). Lily has been a popular girls name for the last decade, happily for me. Willow, Ella and Grace moved out of top ten positions for these entrants.
Ten names have entered the top 100 baby names in 2023, highlighting shifting naming trends among new parents. While this year there are less entrants into the top 100 baby name list compared to earlier entrants, these new names reflect how naming inspiration can change in just one year. See Miles who makes the strongest male entrance at 48, plus Owen and August. For girls, note the new appearance of Lottie, Cleo and Riley. Fewer baby boys will be named Connor, Charles and Remy, and fewer girls will be named Eden, Claire and Gracie.
Thank you to Baby names for boys and girls, Australia Report 2024 by: McCrindle Research NSW
6 comments:
Every country must have different tastes, even if they are English speaking. At the end of 2024, USA Today wrote:
"For girls, the top 100 names list brims with new popular choices like Evelyn, Brooklyn, and Madelyn, BabyCenter said, and other rising stars including Adalee, Avalynn, Lakelyn, Rosalee and Maelynn".
We have very different names for baby girls.
Deb,
Me too. I don't recognise those names except for Evelyn which has been a popular name here in most years since 1910.
That reminds me of American family friends who called their baby Madison because it is much loved over there. It is a name I haven't seen used here.. yet:)
The preference for names shifts with each passing year. Within my family lineage, we have an established tradition of assigning a specific second name to each successive generation.
roentare
I think having the _second_ name being the one passed on, rather than the first name, is an excellent idea. My mother and her five first cousins were all named after their shared grandmother, and all went to the same school. Imagine 6 girls having the same _first_ name!
Every parent tries to choose names for their children that will mark them out. I was interested to read the lists of popular names - among my grand and great-grandchildren we have Charlie, Jack and Luca, and Isla. Isla is insanely popular in UK.
jabblog
perfect... the grandchildren have four of the most popular first names in this entire continent,,, and in Britain as well, I am assuming. Great names.
I just want to check where choosing names that will _mark the children out_ means "popular, common names" or "different, attention grabbing names". I liked my name, but there were so many Helens in my school that I turned around as soon as any Helen was called. On the other hand, If I was called Zixuan, I would have been helping people spelling my name all day long.
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