How popular is the baby name Ambrosia in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Ambrosia.
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The name Ambrosia popped up in the U.S. baby name data only a handful of times during the first half of the 1900s.
When it returned in 1975, though, it stuck around. It rose swiftly in the data from 1979 until 1981, and it continued to see a decent amount of usage per year from the early ’80s until the early 2000s.
1983: 44 baby girls named Ambrosia
1982: 39 baby girls named Ambrosia
1981: 65 baby girls named Ambrosia (peak usage)
1980: 57 baby girls named Ambrosia
1979: 28 baby girls named Ambrosia
1978: 12 baby girls named Ambrosia
1977: 11 baby girls named Ambrosia
Here’s a visual:
What caused that surge in usage?
American yacht-rock band Ambrosia (pronounced am-BROH-zhuh).
The four-member, California-based group put out a string of successful singles during the late 1970s and early 1980s — including the hits “How Much I Feel” (1978) and “Biggest Part of Me” (1980), both of which peaked at #3 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart.
The band was originally called Ambergris Might. After discovering that another rock band was also (improbably) calling themselves Ambergris, though, they decided to change their name. Turning to the dictionary, they spotted “ambrosia” just below “ambergris” and, liking the definition, adopted Ambrosia as their new name.
The word ambrosia — which is based on the ancient Greek word ambrotos, meaning “immortal” — refers to the food of the gods (i.e., the food that made the gods immortal). The more familiar first name Ambrose (as in Ambrose Bierce, and Ambrose Burnside) has the same root.
What are your thoughts on the name Ambrosia?
P.S. The band’s drummer is the appropriately named Burleigh Drummond. :)
In Idaho’s 2003-2009 annual reports, the heading of the unique names section was “Selected Unique Names, Yewneek Spellings.” For 2010, it was lengthened to “Selected Unique Baby Names, Yewneek Baybee Spellings.” Aren’t these a bit snarky for an official state document…?
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