Published:
WhitePages Offers Comprehensive Source for Parents to Explore Unique Baby Names
New Site Offers Popularity Rankings for All Names and Makes It Easy to Discover Meaning, Origin, and History

With a growing trend to give babies uncommon
names, today WhitePages announced the launch of its WhitePages Names
product, which will make it easier for parents-to-be to identify unique
names for their babies based on popularity rankings across the United
States. For years, celebrity couples like David and Victoria Beckham and
Jennifer Garner and Ben Affleck have chosen to give their children unique
names. The new WhitePages product will not only help new parents identify
whether or not their desired name is as unique as "Brooklyn" or "Seraphina", but will
help them to explore the meaning and history behind their name choice.
According to new research out of San
Diego State University, the desire to give a child a unique baby name
transcends the celebrity trend. In analyzing the names of some 325 million
children born in 1880 or later, researchers from San Diego State University
and the University of Georgia found just nine per cent of boys born in 2007
were given a "top 10" name, compared with 32 per cent in 1955; for girls,
only eight per cent had a top 10 name in 2007, versus 22 per cent in 1955.
"There's so much to consider when looking for the right name for your child
including popularity, origin, history and meaning," said Keela Robison, VP
of Product at WhitePages. "We launched WhitePages Names because we wanted
to pair our internal data with the highest quality name etymology research
to help parents-to-be find the perfect name for their upcoming arrival."
With the introduction of WhitePages
Names, WhitePages now offers name popularity ranking for all names,
common and uncommon, based on a database of over 200 million US adults.
WhitePages Names provides a unique and very detailed analysis of name
meanings and is the only site that offers the popularity ranking for first
and last name combinations. Since most name sites only reference popularity
based on the Social Security Top 1000 names data, WhitePages Names is the
place to go for parents seeking information on unusual names.
Based on WhitePages' Names popularity rankings, below are 10 examples of
some unique girl names and their meanings.
-- Anouk: A pet form
of Anne, which is an English form of the Hebrew girl's name Hanna 'He (God)
has favoured me (i.e. with a child)'. There are only 102 people in the US
with the first name Anouk.
-- Amabel: From
Latin amabilis 'lovable' via Old French. Although now very rare in the
English-speaking world, this name lies behind the much commoner name
Annabel and also Mabel. There are only 164 people in the US with the first
name Amabel.
-- Calico: From the
name of the cotton fabric, originally so called because it was imported
from the Indian port of Calicut (now Kozhikode) in Kerala. There are only
31 people in the US with the first name Calico.
-- Carys: Modern
Welsh coinage, from câr 'love' + the ending -ys, derived by analogy with
names such as Gladys. There are only 43 people in the US with the first
name Carys.
-- Lilac: From the
vocabulary word denoting the shrub with large sprays of heavily scented
purple, pink, or white flowers. There are only 75 people in the US with the
first name Lilac.
-- Mimosa: Modern
coinage, from the word denoting the yellow flowering plant, which was named
in the 17th century, probably as a derivative of Latin mîmus 'mime, mimic'.
The idea is that it mimics an animal in its sensitivity to touch. There
are only 56 people in the US with the first name Mimosa.
-- Nigella:
Latinate feminine form of Nigel. Adoption as a given name may also have
been encouraged by the fact that this is an alternative name (from its
black seed) for the flower known as 'love-in-a-mist'. There are only 11
people in the US with the first name Nigella.
-- Saffron: From
the name of the yellow food colouring and flavouring, derived from the
stamens of a species of crocus. As a given name it is most often given to
babies born with strikingly golden hair. There are only 80 people in the US
with the first name Saffron.
-- Sidony: From
Latin Sidonia, feminine of Sidonius, in origin an ethnic name meaning 'man
from Sidon' (the city in Phoenicia). This came to be associated with the
Greek word sindon 'winding sheet'. There are only four people in the US
with the first name Sidony.
-- Zillah: Biblical
name (from a Hebrew word meaning 'shade'), borne by one of the two wives of
Lamech (Genesis 4:19). There are only 173 people in the US with the first
name Zillah.
Based on WhitePages' Names popularity rankings, below are 10 examples of
some unique boys names and their meanings.
-- Aldous:
Uncertain origin, but probably a medieval short form of any of various
Norman names, such as Aldebrand, Aldemund, and Alderan, containing the
Germanic word ald 'old'. There are only 61 people in the US with the first
name Aldous.
-- Baptist:
English form of Church Latin baptista, Greek baptistçs (a derivative of
baptein 'to dip'), the epithet of the most popular of the numerous saints
called John. There are only 35 people in the US with the first name
Baptist.
-- Huxley:
Transferred use of the surname, in origin a local name from a place in
Cheshire which is apparently so called from the genitive case of the Old
English personal name Hucc + Old English lçah 'wood, clearing'. There are
only 42 people in the US with the first name Huxley.
-- Keiller:
Chiefly Canadian: transferred use of the Scottish surname Keiller, from a
village of this name in Perthshire. There are only 6 people in the US with
the first name Keiller.
-- Kilroy:
Transferred use of the surname, which is in origin a variant of Gilroy
which is of Gaelic origin, from an giolla ruadh 'the red-haired lad'. There
are 40 people in the US with the first name Kilroy.
-- Maximus: Latin
cognomen meaning 'greatest'. There are 115 people in the US with the first
name Maximus.
-- Melek: From a
vocabulary element meaning 'king' in Hebrew. It originated in part as a
nickname, in part as a short form of various compound names containing this
element, for example Elimelek 'God is king'. There are 127 people in the US
with the first name Melek.
-- Neo: Modern
coinage, apparently from the prefix derived from Greek neos 'new'. In some
instances, however, the name may be African in origin, from a Tswana word
meaning 'gift'. There are 188 people in the US with the first name Neo.
-- Pacey:
Transferred use of the surname, in origin a Norman baronial name from any
of the places in northern France called Passy. There are 22 people in the
US with the first name Pacey.
-- Rafferty:
Transferred use of the Irish surname. The Gaelic form of this is Ó
Rabhartaigh or Ó Robhartaigh, meaning 'descendant of Robhartach'. There are
74 people in the US with the first name Rafferty.
People interested in using WhitePages Names' free etymology capabilities to
look up the history and meaning of their own name can visit
http://names.whitepages.com/. A name search also offers similar names and
nicknames, the most common last names associated with that name, and a look
at the distribution of that name across individual states and throughout
the entire US. In addition, a name search provides search history for each
name which includes total number of searches on the name and a breakdown of
daily search numbers. With the new WhitePages Name Badge, anyone can share
the popularity and meaning of their name on their website or blog.
About WhitePages
As the largest and most trusted online directory, WhitePages offers a suite
of free mobile and Internet services that makes it easy for people to find
and immediately connect with anyone in the U.S. Only WhitePages offers
one-click access to more than 200 million adults and powers more than 2
billion searches on over 1,300 partner sites including Verizon, AOL, United
States Postal Service, and MSN. For more information, please visit
www.whitepages.com or check out the WhitePages blog at blog.whitepages.com.
WhitePages and their respective logos are trademarks, registered
trademarks, or service marks of WhitePages. Other products and company
names mentioned are the trademarks of their respective owners.
Copyright © 2009, MarketWire
Copyright © 2009, NewsBlaze,
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