How popular is the baby name Karen 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 Karen.

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Popularity of the baby name Karen


Posts that mention the name Karen

Maureen and Mavourneen: Too close for twin names?

Maureen O’Connor, former San Diego mayor (1986-1992), was charged with money laundering in federal court earlier this month.

I don’t know much about the situation, but I was intrigued to learn that Maureen had 12 siblings, including a twin sister with a very similar name — Mavourneen.

(The other siblings are Patrick, Michael, Dennis, Sharon, Dianne, Colleen, Sheila, Timothy, Karen, Thomas and Shawn.)

The names Maureen and Mavourneen (pronounced muh-VOOR-neen) are both Irish, but they have different etymologies:

Maureen is an anglicized form of Máirín, which is a pet form of Máire, which — like the English name Mary — is based on the French name Marie, which comes from the Latin name Maria. In ancient Rome, Maria was originally a feminine form of Marius, but it was later popularized as a version of the Hebrew name Miriam. The meaning of Miriam is unknown, though hypothesized definitions abound: “beloved,” “rebellious,” “strong sea,” “bitter sea,” “drop of the sea,” etc.

Mavourneen is an anglicized form of the Irish phrase mo mhúirnín, meaning “my darling.” It began as a term of endearment, but morphed into a given name probably when the song “Kathleen Mavourneen” (1837) became popular in the mid-1800s. (A number of the 19th-century Mavourneens I’ve tracked down were named “Kathleen Mavourneen.” Many of the 20th century Mavourneens too, actually.)

In terms of popularity, Maureen was one of the top 100 baby names in the U.S. from 1947 until 1954. Mavourneen, on the other hand, has never cracked the U.S. top 1,000.

And now the main question: What do you think of the names Maureen and Mavourneen for twins? Cute? Too close? Somewhere in between?

[Related post: How Similar Should Twin Names Be?]

Holiday baby name: Christmas Eve

Christmas tree decorations

Have any babies ever been named Christmas Eve?

Yup. So far, I’ve found over a dozen.

The earliest two were both born in Norfolk, England, in the 1700s:

  • Christmas Eve Steward, female, baptized on December 28, 1777
  • Christmas Eve Hayes, female, born on December 24, 1793

The next three were born in the 1800s:

  • Christmas Eve, female, christened on January 7, 1838, in Norfolk, England
  • Christmas Eve Flourney, male, born on December 24, 1871, in Texas
  • Alfred Christmas Eve, male, born circa 1877 in Lancashire, England

And the rest are from the 1900s:

  • Christmas Eve Fouts, female, born on December 24, 1901, in Indiana
  • Jonathan Christmas Eve, male, born circa 1903 in Essex, England
  • Christmas Eve Paul, born on 24 December 14, 1962, in North Carolina
  • Christmas Eve Holley, female, born on August 12, 1979, in California
  • Christmas Eve Hall, female, born on December 24, 1984, in Texas
  • Christmas Eve Morgan, female, born on December 24, 1984, in Texas
  • Christmas Eve Gruber, female, born on December 24, 1988, in California
  • Christmas Eve Heywood, female, married in 1993 in Nevada
  • Karen Christmas Eve Wiggins, female, married in 1999 in Florida

Only one of the above was definitively not born on Christmas Eve. I think her August 12 birth date makes a conception date of Christmas Eve plausible. Either that or her surname, Holley, sounds like “holly” and that inspired the Christmas theme.

[More holiday baby names: Merry Christmas, Christmas Day, Christmas Carol, Christmas Tree, Happy New Year]

Image: Adapted from Bellagio Christmas tree by Bert Kaufmann under CC BY-SA 2.0.

Where did the baby name Phajja come from in 1998?

Phajja album "Seize the Moment" (1997)
Phajja album

The unusual name Phajja has appeared in the U.S. baby name data just once so far:

  • 2000: unlisted
  • 1999: unlisted
  • 1998: 7 baby girls named Phajja [debut]
  • 1997: unlisted
  • 1996: unlisted

Where did it come from?

The R&B group Phajja (pronounced fah-jah).

The female trio — Kena, Nakia, and Karen — released their debut album, Seize the Moment, in 1997. The album produced two singles, including their most successful song, “So Long (Well, Well, Well),” which peaked at #87 on Billboard‘s Hot 100 chart and #30 on the Hot R&B Singles chart.

The group’s name, according to the press, was based on an Arabic word meaning “new beginning.” My guess is that this Arabic word was fajr, which means “dawn.” (The “dawn prayer” recited by Muslims is the salat al-fajr.)

What are your thoughts on the baby name Phajja?

Sources:

2 Babies born during wind storms, named Gale

hurricane

1945: While an unnamed Category 4 hurricane was pummeling south Florida on September 15, 1945, Lt. and Mrs. Carl Landau (who were staying at a shelter in West Palm Beach) welcomed a baby girl. They named her Karen Gale.

1950: During the gusty Great Appalachian Storm of November 24-25, 1950, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Quinn of Burlington, Vermont, welcomed a baby girl. They named her Gale.

(And don’t forget Barbara Gale, named for Hurricane Barbara in 1953.)

Sources:

  • “Baby Born in Storm Gets Name of Gale.” Los Angeles Times 17 Sep. 1945: 1.
  • “Named for Storm.” Eugene Register-Guard 12 Dec 1950: 23.
  • “Storm Speeds Toward Georgia, South Carolina Coast.” Sun [Baltimore] 17 Sep. 1945: 1.

Image: Adapted from Hurricane Elena by NASA (public domain)