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ADVICE RATING
 (May work) (May work) (May work) (May work) (May work) 3.89 (May work) from 32 votes (2123 Visits)

10 Great Baby Naming Tips Your Baby Wants You To Know

Jessie by Jessie Walking(August 2006) (rank 500+)

Imagine. Your baby, now 4 years old, has just completed her first day at kindergarten. You’re waiting anxiously for the return of the school bus, praying that she enjoyed her first day at school, that everything went well, that she’ll be OK. She gets off the bus. You

rush forward to hug her. And she’s in tears. Through her sobbing, barely able to understand what she’s saying, you desperately try to find out the cause of her meltdown. Gradually, between sobs, you hear little Apple mumble “they made fun of my name. I’m never going back there. Never.”

Happily, this is not a true story. (As far as I know). But when you’re trying to select your new baby’s name, it’s something you definitely want to avoid.

Picking a name for your baby, especially your first, is not easy. It can be difficult, time-consuming, and fraught with anxiety. These ten tips, excerpted from an article at www.babynamesgarden.com/tips.aspx  will help you successfully give your baby one of her most important lifelong gifts – her name.

 

  1. Start looking at baby names early. You are likely to change your mind often, so the more time you allow, the easier it will be.
  2. Use the internet. There are lots of great resources online, from baby name lists, to articles about the meanings and origins of names, to forums.
  3. Classic is classic for a reason. Classic means time-tested, well-loved. Classic names always work well.
  4. Don’t be too trendy or cool. For example, Brittany was # 3 on the popularity charts in 1990. Today, it doesn’t make the top 50. Tastes and fashions change.
  5. The pressure to use names that have been “handed-down” for generations may be hard to resist. But you should try. Alfred isn’t what it used to be.
  6. Pay attention to what a name may mean, even if the meaning is obscure. The biblical name Helah, for example, actually means “rust.” In this age of the internet, any meanings will be dug up by your child’s middle school friends, so be sure to do a background check on names you are considering.
  7. Don’t make it too hard to pronounce. There’s a reason why Caoimhe (pronounced “kee-va”) hasn’t made it into the Top 100 yet.
  8. Make sure it works with your surname. If your last name is Tree, don’t name your son Ash or your daughter Jade. And if your last name is Johnson, please avoid John.
  9. Consider the siblings, present or planned. If you already have a daughter named Caroline, it would be a little odd to name your son Flint.
  10. Finally, be proud of the name you pick. If you’ve done your research, and agonized over it, you’ve done the best you can. And that’s a special gift for your new baby.

by Jessie.

Any contributed content above is the subjective opinion of that member or external author, and not of Minti.com Pty Ltd. If you are searching for health related advice we strongly suggest you seek professional medical support. View our Terms of Service for more details.

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ADVICE RATING
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Philosopher13
December 9th | Philosopher13
Re: 10 Great Baby Naming Tips Your Baby Wants You To Know

Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! When I was working at a law firm there you should have seen some of the names we came across. I can't repeat them for privacy reasons, but oMG! What are some parents thinking?! 



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LibbyS
January 2008 | LibbyS
Re: 10 Great Baby Naming Tips Your Baby Wants You To Know

An important choice to consider - thanks for sharing!



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astrobeka
5.00 (Excellent) | January 2007 | astrobeka
Names

When I was growing up, and still now at 29, I constantly have to explain to people that my name (Beka, pronounced like Rebecca without the Re) is not really Rebecca.

People often don't believe me and continue to call me Rebecca, even after the explanation that Beka is an old hebrew term of money and weight and not anything to do with the name Rebecca except for the sound.

At school, new students and teachers constantly mispronounced my name (beeeka, bika, baka, Bleka..) and I was always so embarrased.

But I have always liked my name for the fact that I never knew another person with my name, and that my parents chose it from the bible and it reflects our hebrew heritage.



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Bethdyl
October 2006 | Bethdyl
Spelling names
Good advice.  Agree with the spelling.  Spell something how it sounds instead of trying to be different, otherwise your child has to spend the rest of their lives correcting people.  I am really enjoying these name topics at the moment, they're giving me tips for choosing a name for my fourth (16 weeks to go!!)


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michellei
October 2006 | michellei
10 Great Baby Naming Tips Your Baby Wants You To Know
My name was so popular growing up I wanted a new one lol.


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gr8est
4.33 (Good) | August 2006 | gr8est
My wife is named..
after her two nana's very traditional and every nana is happy even my middle name is my fathers but with our bub we decided to pick a name each and unrelated to family


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cheleinkal
5.00 (Excellent) | August 2006 | cheleinkal
back home
In my home town there was a man who's surname was Bronson & that's all anyone ever called him, sooooo, when he had a son he named him Bronson to save time.  This poor childs legal name is "Bronson Bronson".

I hope he learns how to fight. LOL.

I like very old hardly heard of celtic names personally.  I also find that a great source of unusual but usable names can be found in the credits of movies, I pay more attention to credits than the show half the time.  Last names as first names sometimes work, (but not the same name as you already have, poor Bronson).. Like MacKenzie for example, I love that as a girls name.


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      Jessgore
October 2006 | Jessgore
back home

Bronson Bronson... Never met the guy.. But thats merrijig for ya...

Ever heard the song... "BOY NAMED SUE"... Love it...



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MumKim
August 2006 | MumKim
I changed my name as a child!

 I agree. My parents gave me a Japanese name (no I am not Japanese, Dad just had a fascination for the Asian) that was often miss- spelled and mispronounced (actually pronounced as it is spelled and spelled as it is pronounced but people took one look at it and threw all the spelling rules out the window). Australia in the 70's just wasn't ready for it. It drove me made. I actually changed it legally because just shortening it didn't get it off the documentation. I hated the first day of school listening to the roll and wondering how the teacher was going to butcher it when they tried to pronounce it.
Things appear to have changed a bit now as the whole society is more multicultural but be careful of spelling. I actually changed my name to an unusual spelling of a conventional name because I figured that people would miss-spell it regardless. At least this way I have given them a reason!



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angelmum
5.00 (Excellent) | August 2006 | angelmum
10 Great Baby Naming Tips Your Baby Wants You To Know

I sort of agree, I think some parents can go a little to far.  My name is Fiona and I knew no one growing up with that name so I thought I was special and loved it, it wasn't until I was older that I met a few more and I was kind of dissapointed, however I got teased horribly with my last name I hated it kids can be so cruel.  Kids will find anything to pick on you about if they want to and these days there are so many unusual names out there its really not that big of an issue, my son has friends from so many backgrounds that some of their names I cant even pronounce.

 



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      JadieLady
August 2006 | JadieLady
10 Great Baby Naming Tips Your Baby Wants You To Know
i agree. parents should also consider their own names- my mother decided to use a slightly different name in my birth certificate to the one she actually uses, and i had to actually wait until i was 18, and then change my name, just to get hold of my birth certificate!!


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