According to the names website, www.babycenter.com, 2015 saw some very interesting changes in the most popular list for Hispanic baby names in the US. While the names Valeria, Zoe, and Melanie failed to make it to the list of ten most popular girls names, the names Samantha and Emily just managed to reach a top spot. Among the boys names, Mateo and Sebastián were able to maintain their popularity and Daniel and Alexander pushed forward to take sports six and seven. Here is the entire listing with more interesting facts.
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About Muslim Personal Names
Names Meaning Peace: From Axel to Zuelia

The Embarrassment of Forgetting a Name
It has happened to all of us at least once; and to more than a few of us, several times: forgetting someone’s name. It is a universally embarrassing, all too common, experience. In this BBC article, journalist Tom Stafford takes a closer look at this phenomenon and helps to explain the science behind forgetting and remembering people’s names.
Workshop on Morphological Issues of Modern Greek Lexicography, Nicosia, Cyprus, June 22, 2017
On the 22nd of June, 2017, a special workshop examining the morphological issues of modern Greek lexicography will be held in Nicosia, Cyprus. The one-day event will be a part of the 11th Mediterranean Morphology Meeting that will be taking place from the 22nd to the 25th of June 2017 in Nicosia. All interested lexicographers are invited to send in abstracts, no longer than 400 words, to mmm11cy@gmail.com. The deadline for submission is 1 February 2017.
Where the streets have new names: the airbrush politics of renaming roads
Leaders rise and leaders fall. Communities that try to keep up with these vicissitudes may soon find themselves in a real political and financial bind, when it comes to the names that adorn their streets, alleys, rivers, highways, and byways. What is a legislature to do? Should it keep the toponymic reminders of leaders gone-by as valuable sociohistorical signposts of days-gone-by? Or should it try to go with the times and periodically replace public toponyms, particularly those once inspired by leaders who have since fallen into disrepute. In this UK Guardian article, reporter, Nick Van Mead, explores this question and how it has been answered in several major US and European cities.
Call for Nominations for the 2016 Name of the Year
The American Name Society requests nominations for the “Names of the Year for 2016”. The names selected will be ones that best illustrates, through their creation and/or use during the past 12 months, important trends in the culture of the United States and Canada.
Nominations are called for in the four following categories:
Personal Names: Names or nicknames of individual real people, animals, or hurricanes.
Place Names: Names or nicknames of any real geographical location, including all natural features, political subdivisions, streets, and buildings. Names of national or ethnic groups would be included here.
Trade Names: Names of real commercial products, as well as names of both for-profit and non-profit companies and organizations, including businesses, universities, and political parties.
Fictional/Literary Names: Names of fictional persons, places, or institutions, in any written, oral, or visual medium, as well as titles of art works, books, plays, television programs, or movies.
Winners will be chosen in each category, and then a final vote will determine the overall Name of the Year for 2016. Anyone may nominate a name. All members of the American Name Society attending the annual meeting will select the winner from among the nominees at the annual ANS meeting in Austin, Texas on January 6, 2017. The winner will be announced that evening at a joint celebration with the American Dialect Society.
Advance nominations must be received before January 3, 2017. Nominations will also be accepted from the floor at the annual meeting. Please send your nominations, along with a brief rationale, to Dr. Cleveland K. Evans at cevans[@]bellevue.edu.
What does your username say about you?
We all have at least one and most of us have several. Some of them we use once others we use almost every day. For the most part, we create them ourselves but increasingly they are assigned to us. We are told we should keep them a secret but we often share them with thousands or even millions of people around the globe. What is all this fuss about? Usernames. In this MSN video, learn all about what your own username(s) may be telling the world about you.
Invented Baby Names: 84 awesome choices and 2 big winners!
Have you ever wanted to invent an entirely new name? In 2015, Nameberry.com offered name-connoisseurs a chance to send in their submissions for the best invented name. The contest rules for creating a new name were simple. People were asked to combine two or more existing names, convert a pre-existing word into a name, or come up with a completely unique onomastic creation all on their own. Some of the best contest entries were Hallory, Aliciana, Kahlia, Cardigan, Mazana, and Faraday. Learn which entries onomastic specialists Pamela Redmond Satran and Abby Sandel selected as their favorites.
Quiz: popular dog name or popular baby name?
For many people, household pets are fully integrated members of the family. That being the case, it should come as no surprise that many of the traditional names that were once almost exclusively given to canines (e.g. Rex, King, and, yes Lassie) have given way to decidedly more human monikers. In the Australia’s newspaper, The Guardian, you can try your luck at determining which names came from the most popular baby name list and which ones came from the most popular dog name list.