I’ve never known anyone named Kaitlin who is my age or older, but in recent years I’ve seen a lot of little girls named Kaitlin (or some variant). It’s frustrating when I’m at the grocery store to hear someone call my name, and when I turn around on autopilot to respond I see a little girl running across the store to her mommy.
My middle name has never really caught on, although when people find out that it’s Ariel, they inevitably start singing “Under the Sea.”
I was born in 1970, I didn’t hear of anyone else named Krista until college. It’s more popular now than it used to be, but I still don’t hear it all that often (thank goodness).
Damn it. I want to name my son Collin if I ever have one but don’t want there to be a ton of people with the same name. When is this Celtic naming fad going to end?
(And just FYI, I got the name from a very non-Celtic source so I’m not a part of the fad.)
My first name is Bailie. My parents took my mother’s maiden name Bailey and tweaked the spelling a bit. I never knew another Bailie (first name) and nobody ever spelled my name right. But now there are all sorts Bailies running around. Unfortunately they’re all about 5 years old and none of them have the same spelling. The worst was when I was working in daycare and there was a little girl with my name only it was spelled Baileigh. Yuck. :-p
I’d never met another, besides my maternal grandfather (after whom I was named), until my brother had a son (and oddly enough, that one’s got the same last name, as well).
I’ve met plenty of Stevens and plain ol’ Steves which is what I call myself to cut down on confusion, oh and there’s is Stephen King. But here’s the kicker it’s not pronouced Steven, it’s pronouced Steffin. Nobody’s gona match that right? Wrong, I know three. Except of course it’s like Rosaline/Rosalyn, Rozlyn (and so on until infinity), nobody spells it the same. We had a meeting but never agreed on the proper spelling, we deadlocked at one vote each.
Born in 1963, I was given the name of Kyle. Not a rare name in the South at the time. Texas A&M football team plays at Kyle field, but not really common, and when I met another Kyle, it was usually a rural southern white guy. In the 90’s I remember seeing several sit-com characters, black and white, named Kyle. Maybe Kyle Mcglaughlin helped. I don’t know if it is still trendy, but it was fashionable in the 90’s.
Conversely, my (tiny) college class of 39 had seven guys named Tom, while my son has only had one classmate named Tom in nine years (and five schools in four districts).
(We also had sixteen guys named John, a name I rarely see among kids my son’s age.)
Julia. I’ve only ever met a handful of other people around my age (I was born in 1978) named Julia. The last few years however, it’s been in the top 20 names, or at least close to it.
Oh, and incidentally Ethilrist and interface2x, my brother’s name is Colin too. He’s not quite 22, so I’m not sure if that makes him young enough to count as a kid though. (He certainly acts like one still…)
My wife counted 35 people with the same name as me in the local phone book. i could think of at least 10 off the top of my head. “Michael” was always near the top of the popularity lists, I think it’s fallen a bit lately. I was born in 1968. Anyone car to guess my last name?
Luckily Ava still isn’t a very popular name. However, I didn’t hear or read about another Ava besides Ava Gardner until I was in college. Now I have seen about 4 or 5 total out there. More than I would like.
If he’s young enough to be my kid (and he is…) then he’s young enough to be a kid.
Kids these days…
Master Control–Shortly after I moved to the Twin Cities, I was helping a friend move. There was a large bearded gentleman they introduced as Joel. After a while of schlepping boxes back and forth, I asked my friend, “is that Joel ‘I release the power from my staff’”? (Loooong Twin Cities gaming story omitted).
My friend said, “No, that’s Joel Rosenberg.”
:eek:
:eek:
:eek:
The author of one of my favorite fantasy series of all time, the Guardians of the Flame books. I had to go introduce myself.
I was born in 1963. I haven’t checked the popularity lists, but Ellen seems to be rare, but certainly not uncommon. I grew up in a small town and there were three of us in school at the same time, although not in the same grade. Occasionally I’ll hear it in a young kid, but really not that much.
My daughter’s name is Claire and I’d never heard of any besides a girl I went to college with, which gave me the idea. Now it seems to be climbing in popularity. The name Christopher, my son, seems to be in the perenially middling popular category. Although now I wish I’d named him Kristoff, which is what I call him all the time just because I think it’s strange and cute.