I’d like to know how “Caitlin”, and its multiple spelling variants, took off, and why. It’s an old-fashioned Irish name.
Same thing with “Madison”.
“Gage” came from the TV show “Emergency”. People who watched it back in the 1970s liked the name and said, “If I ever have a son, I want to name him Gage” and that’s where it came from.
Some movie stars have named their kids Ava, Lola, Ella, etc. Florence is making a comeback too, because of the singer from Florence + The Machine.
mrAru is named Robert Andrew, his father is Robert Roy. His father in family was always called Rob, while mrAru was called Drew. The guys in the navy on his boat/in his division called him Rob, I call him Rob, people who don’t know him [like phone salesmen] call him Bob.
Yes, I worked with his dad as well. He already had a son named Robert from a previous marriage, but he still wanted to name his youngest after himself. He said he was playing around with variations of his name, and realized that it was pronounceable spelled backwards.
I had assumed that it came from a common christian name for pet spaniels in the 18th century; * ‘My little dog, Tray.’*
I never wondered where that name came from.
Oops, I forgot to put the link to teh Chad graffito in my previous post. Here it is. You can get quite a lot of them if you google image search chad wot no wall. (Just Chad gets you mostly the African country.)
There used to be a major sweet (“candy” to Americans) making company in Britain called Trebor. They were absorbed by Cadbury’s quite a while ago, but these (and very possibly some other products) are still sold under the Trebor name. I think most British people would be familiar with the name from that. I do not know where the name came from, though, and neither Wikipedia nor this site is much help. One of the founders was apparently called Robert Robertson, but it is not apparent that he was such a preeminent figure in the firm that it would be named for him (backwards).