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Home ::
Cool Baby Names
Think Emily Is A Cool Baby Name? Just Ask Poor
Lisa
Author: Neil Street
Expecting a baby and looking for one of those cool baby names?. How
about the name Emily? If sheer popularity is anything to go by, then
Emily is pretty darn cool. In fact, it’s been number one for an amazing
ten years. But before you settle on Emily (if you’re looking for a
girl’s name), you may want to consider
Lisa. Or Brittany, Heather, or Amanda.
For most of the 1960s, Lisa
was the # 1 girl’s name, much as Emily is today. From 1962 to 1969 Lisa
was # 1 each year, and it remained in the top three until 1972. But from
1972 through today, Lisa lost ground steadily, registering a new low at
# 493 in 2005. In other words, Lisa is off the map. What was once the
coolest name in America is now ignored by almost everyone.
Lisa is not
alone in its fall from stardom. Heather, the third most popular girl’s
name of the mid-1970s, comes in at # 300 today. Amanda, a top three
mainstay for most of the 1980s, has slumped to # 80, and is trending its
way right out of the Top 100. And most recently Brittany, one of the
coolest girl’s
names of the early 90s, is # 278, heading for the baby name retirement
home (at least until it’s cool again).
The point of all these statistics? Cool
names, like any other fashion, are only fashionable until they’re not.
And, sooner or later, most names that enjoy a fast rise to the top
suffer an equally fast exit. To see how name fads have come and gone,
you’ll find some fun tools at the Social Security Administration’s
Popular Baby Names page, located at
http://www.socialsecurity.gov/OACT/babynames. You'll also find the top
1000 baby names, and the top 100 baby names broken out by state, at
http://www.babynamesgarden.com.
Boys’ names also rise and fall with the times, although the peaks and
valleys are flatter than for girls’ names. Boys names are a bit more
staid. Jeffrey, a top 10 name for about five years in the early 1960s,
is down to # 171 today. Brian, a top 10 favorite in the 1970s, landed at
# 63 in 2005. And Robert, a
top 10 certainty for almost four decades, from the 1950s through the
1980s, is now a humdrum # 39.
Whether for a boy or
a girl, if you’re considering a trendy baby name, think about how that
name will be perceived in twenty years, when junior heads off to
college. Fashions change, and today’s Emily or Jacob may be tomorrow’s
Heather or Jeffrey. And finally, before you settle on one of today’s
“cool” names, remember the cautionary tale of Donna. A top 10 name for a
decade, from the mid-1950s to the mid-1960s, the name Donna is barely
considererd today. It has slipped more than 800 places, all the way to #
830. Come to think of it, maybe it’s time for Donna to make a comeback.
About The Author: Neil Street is
co-publisher of Baby Names Garden, a website for helping prospective
parents pick a baby name, located at
http://www.babynamesgarden.com He is also editor of the Celebrity
Baby Names Blog, at
http://www.celebritybabynamesblog.com He writes frequently about
baby naming topics.
For lists of baby names, use this link
below:
baby name lists
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