[Opinions] Do you know any good Australian names?
Hi Everyone
Just wondering, does anyone know of any good Australian names.
Male or female.
Thanks
Shae
Just wondering, does anyone know of any good Australian names.
Male or female.
Thanks
Shae
Replies
If you want names popular in Australia Chrisell has given you a link. For the most part names in Australia are usually English names, or an ethnic name (say Italians) but using the English form, so Giovanni would be John or Johnny.
Irish & Scottish name, mainly surnames, are semi popular and have been for a while.
Irish & Scottish name, mainly surnames, are semi popular and have been for a while.
How about Sidney? Just kidding. I looked up Australian names on another website, and I found these for the year 2001.
Boys-
Jacob
Michael
Joshua
Matthew
Andrew
Joseph
Nicholas
Anthony
Tyler
Daniel
Sorry, all I could find were boy names. You're better off asking someone who's Australian. :-)
Boys-
Jacob
Michael
Joshua
Matthew
Andrew
Joseph
Nicholas
Anthony
Tyler
Daniel
Sorry, all I could find were boy names. You're better off asking someone who's Australian. :-)
Ok, let's start at the beginning . . .
Firstly, what do you mean by an Australian name? Do you mean:
a) Names that are popular in Australia, or
b) Names that originated in Australia, or
c) Aboriginal Australian Names.
?
In answer to (a), here is a link showing decade-by-decade popularities for the state of Victoria, which is probably a good representation of populations nationwide (the other states don't have this information online):
http://210.15.223.49/cgi-bin/edeaths?form=Names
In answer to (b), there are not many names which originated in Australia. These few are possibilities:
Kylie is a word meaning "boomerang" in several Aboriginal languages, however it's uncertain whether that's where the name originated. It is NOT a personal name in that language, so if the name came from the word it did so amongst the English-speaking population.
Nerida *may* also be a word in an Aboriginal language however that has not been confirmed.
Narelle may have been invented in Australia but this is also unconfirmed.
As for (c), there are over 200 different Indigenous Australian languages, each with their own complete set of personal names. As far as I know, no-one has attempted to assemble a list of Aboriginal personal names. Most names listed as "Aboriginal" on Baby Names sites or in Baby Names books are actually words, not names (usually the names of trees, plants or places, which were not used as personal names). I'll do some Googling and see if I can find any Aboriginal name resources, but I'm not too hopeful.
Let me know what you're looking for if I haven't answered it! :-)
BTW, I am a born and bred Australian and have lived on both sides of the continent (Perth and Sydney), and I am a trained and practicing archaeologist.
:-)
Firstly, what do you mean by an Australian name? Do you mean:
a) Names that are popular in Australia, or
b) Names that originated in Australia, or
c) Aboriginal Australian Names.
?
In answer to (a), here is a link showing decade-by-decade popularities for the state of Victoria, which is probably a good representation of populations nationwide (the other states don't have this information online):
http://210.15.223.49/cgi-bin/edeaths?form=Names
In answer to (b), there are not many names which originated in Australia. These few are possibilities:
Kylie is a word meaning "boomerang" in several Aboriginal languages, however it's uncertain whether that's where the name originated. It is NOT a personal name in that language, so if the name came from the word it did so amongst the English-speaking population.
Nerida *may* also be a word in an Aboriginal language however that has not been confirmed.
Narelle may have been invented in Australia but this is also unconfirmed.
As for (c), there are over 200 different Indigenous Australian languages, each with their own complete set of personal names. As far as I know, no-one has attempted to assemble a list of Aboriginal personal names. Most names listed as "Aboriginal" on Baby Names sites or in Baby Names books are actually words, not names (usually the names of trees, plants or places, which were not used as personal names). I'll do some Googling and see if I can find any Aboriginal name resources, but I'm not too hopeful.
Let me know what you're looking for if I haven't answered it! :-)
BTW, I am a born and bred Australian and have lived on both sides of the continent (Perth and Sydney), and I am a trained and practicing archaeologist.
:-)
www.babycentre.co.uk
These are the names listed as the 10 most popular in Australia (I'm assuming for 2003)
I don't know that there are really any "Australian names." Like there aren't really any American names, just a mixture.
Girls' Names
1. Emily
2. Jessica
3. Chloe
4. Isabella
5. Sarah
6. Sophie
7. Olivia
8. Georgia
9. Grace
10. Hannah
Boys' Names
1. Joshua
2. Lachlan
3. Jack
4. Thomas
5. Ethan
6. James
7. Daniel
8. Nicholas
9. William
10. Benjamin
These are the names listed as the 10 most popular in Australia (I'm assuming for 2003)
I don't know that there are really any "Australian names." Like there aren't really any American names, just a mixture.
Girls' Names
1. Emily
2. Jessica
3. Chloe
4. Isabella
5. Sarah
6. Sophie
7. Olivia
8. Georgia
9. Grace
10. Hannah
Boys' Names
1. Joshua
2. Lachlan
3. Jack
4. Thomas
5. Ethan
6. James
7. Daniel
8. Nicholas
9. William
10. Benjamin
here are some names form my book that say Down Under cool
girls
Adelaide
Alana
Annika
Ava
Eliza
Imogen
Lola
Matilda
Sydney
boys
Archer
Blake
Caleb
Callum
Cambell
Finn
Flynn
Jasper
Kane
Luca
girls
Adelaide
Alana
Annika
Ava
Eliza
Imogen
Lola
Matilda
Sydney
boys
Archer
Blake
Caleb
Callum
Cambell
Finn
Flynn
Jasper
Kane
Luca
ROFL, I don't think so . . .
It's extremely rare for Australian girls to be called Adelaide or Sydney - they're CITIES!
Alana - I know a few. It's not very common
Annika - briefly popular around 1990-1995
Ava - far less common than in America
Eliza - common in the 1990s
Imogen - common in the 1990s
Lola - not common at all, I've never met or heard of one
Matilda - rare but not unknown.
Archer - never heard it used as a first name at all
Blake - commonish in the 1980s
Caleb - popular in the 1990s
Callum - popular in the 1990s
Campbell - I've met one. Very rare
Finn - not common but it is used
Flynn - never met or heard of one
Jasper - never met or heard of one
Kane - rare
Luca - very rare, only on a few boys of Italian descent until the last few years.
The lesson here - DO NOT trust books or sites which say they know about Australian names unless they are PUBLISHED BY AN AUSTRALIAN!
It's extremely rare for Australian girls to be called Adelaide or Sydney - they're CITIES!
Alana - I know a few. It's not very common
Annika - briefly popular around 1990-1995
Ava - far less common than in America
Eliza - common in the 1990s
Imogen - common in the 1990s
Lola - not common at all, I've never met or heard of one
Matilda - rare but not unknown.
Archer - never heard it used as a first name at all
Blake - commonish in the 1980s
Caleb - popular in the 1990s
Callum - popular in the 1990s
Campbell - I've met one. Very rare
Finn - not common but it is used
Flynn - never met or heard of one
Jasper - never met or heard of one
Kane - rare
Luca - very rare, only on a few boys of Italian descent until the last few years.
The lesson here - DO NOT trust books or sites which say they know about Australian names unless they are PUBLISHED BY AN AUSTRALIAN!