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    First Baby Names of 2012, From Adian to Zoey

    The first babies born in 2012 got monikers both traditional and creative, with a trend of alternative spellings for old names continuing into the New Year.

    On Jan. 2, the website namecandy.com released a list of the names of the first babies born in each U.S. state in 2012. The names run the gamut from Melissa to Kay'lyn among the girls and from Ezekiel to Jayden among the boys.

    Though baby-naming trends can't be extrapolated from a tiny sample of babies who happened to be born on the same day, the list isn't a bad representation of modern baby names, said Laura Wattenberg, a statistician and baby-name expert who runs babynamewizard.com.

    "If you had just stepped outside your time machine and wanted to understand 2012 baby names, you could do worse than look at this list," Wattenberg told LiveScience.

    What you'd find is that the letters "K" and "A" are popular as the first letters of many names, with parents picking names such as Karis, Kyren and Kalylah for their infants. Traditional names are on the decline, but show up more frequently in the Northeast.

    "This goes back to the red-state, blue-state naming styles," Wattenberg said. "The mountain West and the deep South tend to be much more wide-open creative naming cultures."

    Parents are also putting new twists on old traditions in recent years, Wattenberg said, another trend that holds up on the NameCandy list. Biblical names, like Rhode Island's new baby Ezekiel, are as popular as ever, but parents are digging deeper for fresh-sounding monikers.

    "Christian parents are increasingly using Old-Testament names that used to sound Jewish," Wattenberg said. For example, she said, in 2010, 236 American boys were named Hezekiah, the name of the 14th king of Judah. Texas' 2012 baby Shekinah is another example of an obscure Biblical reference. The word is a Hebrew term referring to the divine presence. [See the state-by-state list of first baby names]

    The first baby born in the U.S. in 2012 was a little girl named Jenna Carly Tuedla, born in Guam on Chammorro Standard Time, according to NameCandy. Jenna was the 141st most popular name in the United States in 2010, the last year for which data are available.

    Other name trends to look for in 2012 include the use of punctuation (see Kentucky's Kay'lyn, for an example), Wattenberg said. Punctuation has long been a trend in black families, but parents of many races are getting in on the trend, she said.

    "One interesting meta-trend over the past generation is that since African American naming has been so creative for so long, often African American families are leading trends that white families then follow," she said. "Some of the Biblical trends, like Isiah and Elijah are examples of that."

    Another small-but-growing trend is the use of firearms-inspired names like Colt, Remington and Gauge, Wattenberg said. This trend may be in part because parents are looking for strong, macho-sounding names for boys as more and more boy names get used for girls, she said. But there are likely cultural reasons, too.

    "You don't name children after something you don't value," Wattenberg said. "So just as you had children named Grace and Pearl in the last generation, if your children are named Luger and Beretta today, that has to say something about your values."

    You can follow LiveScience senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

     

    28 comments

    • ragsangle  •  Potsdam, New York  •  28 days ago
      Just once I'ld like someone to read my name and pronouce it correctly! Not to mention ask me a dozen and half times to spell my name then the same for my last name!!! At 57 years old I doubt that will happen in my lifetime...name your child with common sense and spell it so it can be read!!! The child has to live with it...why put a child through hell all thier life just because u wanna be different????
    • Tess  •  28 days ago
      Ah, names.... none worse than Ima and Ura Hogg... and yes they were real women. Think before you name your kids and remember how cruel other children will be. Had a neighbor named her son BJ and no it didn't stand for anything, it wasn't a nickname for Benjamin Joseph or anything else, she simply wrote BJ on his birth certificate... we felt so sorry for the kid. Crazy woman.
    • VBGirl  •  28 days ago
      When people try to get "creative" it makes me think they just plain can't spell!
    • indycar01  •  Southfield, Michigan  •  27 days ago
      yahoo, PLEASE STOP!.. removing me!..
    • Harley  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      Punctuation in a name unless it's cultural (Hawaiian for example) is plain stupid. I'm sorry, but a "creative" spelling for your child's name only sets them apart on paperwork, nothing else. It's a lifetime of a pain in the *** when you constantly have to spell your name out for others because Mommy and Daddy decided that Kay'lyn was somehow more "unique" than Kaylyn when it sounds the same said aloud. People are idiots.
    • Michelle  •  Middletown, New York  •  28 days ago
      i named my child Ahladah because i loved the spelling and her last name is Cash :)
    • smiley23456  •  Moncton, Canada  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      The kids are the ones who have to bear the consequences of their parent’s whims! The person is not going to be pleased with a parent who purposely caused them so much un-necessary bother/irritation by the continual mis-spelling (&/or mispronunciations, depending upon how strangely the parents decided to spell the name) of their name. Valentines, birthday invitations, greeting cards, ... will generally be spelled the traditional way by the giver (which will needlessly inflict feelings of hurt or frustrated to this child ... and if the giver finds out that they spelled the name properly it will cause them discomfort/embarrassment -- a no win situation). Every time they will have to give their name (to go on a form, etc. ) they will have to spell it for the person to assure that the spelling is modified to be as their parents opted to name them. Parents are supposed to love their newborns and want to give a life of happiness to their child -- why then would any one deliberately choose to create potential problems and pain?
    • Kasee Ann  •  28 days ago
      I think punctuation in a name is unique not stupid. I have a unique spelling and it doesn't bother me to spell out my name when someone asks because at least they get it right...
    • Jessi  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      this is why some ppl never get called back for a job.
    • CLT  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      I'm going to name my child lose'r. I think the punctuation makes her look classy.
    • Sapience  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      Parents need to remember their babies will want to be taken seriously when they are adults and trying to make a career. It's cute in poofy letters on the nursery wall; not so cute on a nameplate on a desk or on a business card.
    • S  •  San Antonio, Texas  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      I like simple names that your child can at least spell
    • Al W  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      Al didn't make the list?!?!?!
    • Jeff  •  Albuquerque, New Mexico  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      Not a fan of most black family names. They are way outrageous. Free country though. Bonequesha and latifah and ky'teshia? I'm good
    • Destinych3  •  Westland, Michigan  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      Remember seeing a news report and the kid they interviewed was named "Darealyst"...
    • brightstar  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      Heard Mr. and Mrs. Hogg named their daughter Ima.
    • Allyson  •  Seminole, Texas  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      when i got pregnant with my first child i wanted a little boy because i loved the name isaiah. well come to find out i was having a girl! and since i hadn't thought of ANY other names i just changed isaiah into azaya and i love it even more!
    • Jennifer  •  Burbank, California  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      I named my son Remington, because I loved it and was different!
    • Traveler  •  1 mth 18 days ago
      In some societies, so I have read, names are given depending on what the child's attributes seem to be. Here, though, I have thought that some names were given becuase the little baby was so sweet and adorable so got a cute babyish sounding name. Seems funny to hear someone applying for social security and their name is so obviously last century instead of more universal.
    • Angel, Kraze  •  Concord, New Hampshire  •  1 mth 17 days ago
      When i was having my first child, a girl people would ask what I was going to name her. Raven...."Oh, is she black"? was always the response so yes this world is prejudice even if the name sounds different they think the person will be but my beautiful daughter Raven Lotus says she loves her name
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