How popular is the baby name Scarlett 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 Scarlett.
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The most popular baby names in Victoria, Australia, were announced recently.
According to the Department of Justice, Victoria’s top names are Jack for boys and Olivia for girls.
Here are the top 20 girl names and boy names of 2012:
Baby Girl Names
Baby Boy Names
1. Olivia 2. Charlotte 3. Ruby 4. Chloe 5. Mia 6. Emily 7. Amelia 8. Sophie 9. Ava 10. Zoe 11. Isabella 12. Sienna 13. Ella 14. Lily 15. Grace 16. Matilda 17. Isla 18. Scarlett 19. Emma 20. Hannah
1. Jack 2. William 3. Oliver 4. Ethan 5. Thomas 6. Noah 7. James 8. Lucas 9. Joshua 10. Alexander 11. Cooper 12. Lachlan 13. Xavier 14. Samuel 15. Liam & Max [tie] 16. Oscar 17. Mason 18. Charlie 19. Jacob 20. Benjamin
The most popular baby names in Scotland were announced last week.
According to the General Register Office, the preliminary winners were Jack for boys and Sophie for girls. Jack has been #1 for five years in a row, and Sophie for eight years in a row.
Here are Scotland’s top 20 girl names and top 20 boy names of January-November, 2012:
Baby Girl Names
Baby Boy Names
1. Sophie 2. Emily 3. Olivia 4. Ava 5. Lucy 6. Isla 7. Lily 8. Jessica 9. Amelia 10. Mia 11. Millie 12. Eva 13. Ellie 14. Chloe 15. Freya 16. Sophia 17. Grace 18. Emma 19. Hannah 20. Holly
1. Jack 2. Lewis 3. Riley 4. James 5. Logan 6. Daniel 7. Ethan 8. Harry 9. Alexander 10. Oliver 11. Max 12. Tyler 13. Aaron & Charlie [tie] 15. Adam 16. Finlay 17. Alfie 18. Mason 19. Ryan 20. Liam & Lucas [tie]
Some of the names that increased in popularity from 2011 to 2012:
Lola (up 24 places to #63) Mollie (up 24 places to #68) Amelia (up 20 places to #9) Orla (up 19 places to #36) Hollie (up 18 places to #39) Georgia (up 13 places to #58) Lexi (up 12 places to #38) Lacey (up 12 places to #41) Poppy (up 11 places to #34)
Harris (up 20 places to #29) Harrison (up 20 places to #53) Tyler (up 20 places to #12) Brodie (up 17 places to #54) Max (up 15 places to #11) Mason (up 13 places to #18) Finn (up 13 places to #66) Riley (up 11 places to #3)
New to the top 100 are Bella, Darcy, Emelia, Lois, Scarlett and Willow (for girls) and Alex, Blake, Calvin, George, Olly, Sebastian, Shay and Zac (for boys).
Among the names moving downward are Abigail, Chloe, Jasmine and Phoebe (for girls) and Aiden, Jayden and Mohammed for boys. (Aiden is down 16 places to #36; Jayden down 10 places to #40.)
The most popular baby names in Northern Ireland were announced a little while ago.
According to the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency, the #1 names were Jack for boys and Sophie for girls.
Here are Northern Ireland’s provisional top 20 girl names and top 20 boy names of 2012:
Baby Girl Names
Baby Boy Names
1. Sophie 2. Emily 3. Grace 4. Amelia 5. Jessica 6. Lucy 7. Sophia 8. Katie 9. Eva 10. Aoife 11. Chloe 12. Lily 13. Ella 14. Mia 15. Ellie 16. Anna [tie] 16. Emma [tie] 16. Olivia [tie] 19. Erin 20. Sarah
1. Jack 2. James 3. Daniel 4. Harry 5. Charlie 6. Ethan 7. Matthew 8. Ryan 9. Riley 10. Noah 11. Adam 12. Joshua 13. Jacob 14. Thomas 15. Conor 16. Jake [tie] 16. Oliver [tie] 18. Dylan 19. Alfie 20. Mason
The highest climbers within the top 20 lists were Aoife (15th to 10th) and Riley (18th to 9th).
Other high climbers were Bobby (124th to 59th), Blake (111th to 71st) and Olly (131st to 93rd) for boy names, and Miley (135th to 79th) and Layla (135th to 83rd) for girl names.
[Very curious about Bobby! Can anybody explain that one?]
Names that decreased in popularity include Calum (down 93 spots), Padraig (-49) and Conan (-28) on the boys’ list, and Ciara (-53), Victoria (-49) and Julia (-48) on the girls’ list.
Finally, here are some of the more unusual names registered in 2012:
“…the annually-published list does show that, for the first time in nine centuries, English people are easily identifiable by class solely by their name, since most names in the 2011 list have strong class biases either way.”
“Social mobility will be achieved only when we all give our children the same names.”
Have you spotted anything interesting or surprising on the England and Wales 2011 list?
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