How popular is the baby name Renee 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 Renee.

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Popularity of the baby name Renee


Posts that mention the name Renee

Baby born at McKechnie Field, named McKechnie

baseballs

The Pittsburgh Pirates are currently in spring training at McKechnie Field in Bradenton, Florida.

Yesterday, at the Pirates’ “soft opening” event, local resident Latasha Renee Kirk — pregnant, but not due until April 1 — went into labor early.

As she was making her way back to the ballpark’s entrance to wait for an ambulance, she gave birth to a baby boy. Assisting in the delivery was Trevor Gooby, director of Florida operations for the Pirates.

What did Latasha decide to name the baby?

McKechnie, after the field.

(The field was named in honor of hall-of-fame Pirates manager Bill McKechnie, whose parents were immigrants from Scotland.)

Source: “The Gooby Samaritan.” Philadelphia Inquirer 1 Mar. 2012.

Image: Adapted from Baseballs 01 (7167016821) by Scott McLeod under CC BY 2.0.

Baby names needed: Names for twin girls

A reader named Bridgette is having twin girls in October and would like some name suggestions.

The plan is to use the babies’ grandmothers’ names, Eileen and Patricia, as middle names. So Bridgette and her husband are interested in names that sound good in front of either Eileen or Patricia. (Especially Patricia–that’s the one they’re having a hard time with.)

Here are the names currently under consideration:

Alice
Amelia
Corinne
Gwyneth
Juliette
Margot
Paige
Renee
Sabrina
Shannon

Bridgette and her husband like different types of names (i.e. one likes unisex, the other prefers feminine, etc.) so it sounds like they’re open to all sorts of suggestions–so long as the suggestions work with Eileen and/or Patricia.

Finally, here’s a cute observation Bridgette made:

Husband’s mostly Irish and says he’d like an Irish name, but seems to gravitate toward French sounding names.

Sounds like she knows him better than he knows himself. :)

Here are some of the name ideas I had, to kick things off:

Camille
Celeste
Charlotte
Claire
Clarice
Daphne
Darcy
Edith
Elise
Esme
Eve/Eva
Frances
Grace
Hannah
Jocelyn
Judith/Judy
Kelly
Lucille/Lucy
Mabel
Maeve
Marie
Meredith
Michelle
Molly
Naomi
Nicole
Opal*
Penelope
Rachel
Romana
Rosie
Ruth
Sabine
Sadie
Simone
Suzanne
Sylvie
Tara
Vivian/Vivienne
Yvonne

*It’s the birthstone for October, so I had to throw it in.

Which of the above do you like best? See any good pairings? What other names and name pairings would you suggest to Bridgette?

Baby name story: Petal

I know of two Petals born in 2009. One belongs to chef Jamie Oliver, and the other belongs to Renée Soeterik and Boris Milinkovich of Toronto.

How did the latter Petal get her name? Well, Renee was taking a bath, Boris was brushing his teeth, and they were discussing baby names.

A vase of beautiful mixed flowers, from Boris – sent for no particular reason – sat on a ledge near Renée’s feet. A petal fell on her toe; she said “Petal.”

…and Petal’s what stuck.

Most people think the baby’s name is “charming and unique,” according to Renée, but a few have said it sounds like a stripper name.

What’s your opinion on Petal?

Source: A winter’s tale turns to a pretty, perfect Petal

Dad’s computer algorithm spits out so-so baby name

Over the weekend, I read Renee Moilanen’s funny account of her husband attempting “a more mathematical approach to baby naming” after all other methods had failed.

First, he had us each write down names that appealed to us. Second, my husband categorized our choices using three different baby name books to determine that we wanted a timeless name in the “fitting in/standing out” genre. Next, he downloaded 200 years’ worth of historical baby name data from the Social Security Administration and loaded it into a geeky software program called Matlab.

Lastly – I swear I am not making this up – he created an algorithm to yield all of the timeless, fitting in/standing out and not-too-trendy names by weeding out names with big popularity spikes (goodbye Jennifer and Jason) and those currently in the top 100 of popularity.

(Have to be nitpicky for just a second — the SSA only has about 130 years’ worth of data, not 200 years’ worth.)

Sadly, after all that work, they didn’t find a name they loved.

[W]e picked a name off the list that we both could tolerate. We didn’t love it, and even now, we only half-joke about changing it. But the name seems like it suits our serious little engineer-in-training: Grant.

Undoubtedly, when Grant grows up, he’ll hate his name. But at the very least, he’ll have to appreciate his father’s dogged determination to find a quantifiably perfect name. My husband spent many long nights tweaking that algorithm and crunching data for a little guy he’d never met but loved just the same.

On the one hand, it’s a great story. I love that the husband actually set out to find a “quantifiably perfect name.”

On the other hand, the name they ended up with is one they “tolerate” and “half-joke about.” Hm.

What do you think — successful experiment?

Source: Who picks a name for a newborn without crunching the data first?