KEMBAR78
Whats in A Name - Transcript 1 PDF | PDF
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
80 views2 pages

Whats in A Name - Transcript 1 PDF

The document discusses trends in unusual and creative names that celebrities give their children. Some trends discussed include using nouns as names like Passion, Haven, Ridge; nature names like Fox, Wolf, Bear; musical names like Lyric; food names like Apple, Olive; and naming children after letters in anagrams like the Dutch family that named their six kids with names all using the letters A, E, L, and X. The discussion provides examples of these trends and notes that unusual names at first can become more normal over time.

Uploaded by

Marta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
80 views2 pages

Whats in A Name - Transcript 1 PDF

The document discusses trends in unusual and creative names that celebrities give their children. Some trends discussed include using nouns as names like Passion, Haven, Ridge; nature names like Fox, Wolf, Bear; musical names like Lyric; food names like Apple, Olive; and naming children after letters in anagrams like the Dutch family that named their six kids with names all using the letters A, E, L, and X. The discussion provides examples of these trends and notes that unusual names at first can become more normal over time.

Uploaded by

Marta
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 2

Listening skills practice: What’s in a name?

– transcript
Transcript for What’s in a name?

Presenter 1: Today we are going to talk about names, particularly fashions in names, you know, the
kind of names famous people use for their children. You’ve been looking into this
recently, haven’t you, Finn?
Presenter 2: I have indeed and it’s a fascinating topic. The US leads here with new names and we in
Britain follow sometimes, but we tend to go for the more traditional names. So, the big
trend is using nouns as names.
Presenter 1: Nouns, what sort of nouns?
Presenter 2: Well they can be abstract qualities like Honor or Passion. There’s a long tradition of this
kind of name, like Faith or Charity, which used to be common names. A new name is
Haven, that’s growing in popularity. And similar names like Shelter, Harbor and Bay also
convey feelings of safety and warmth.
Presenter 1: Mmm. I suppose Passion is used to mean ‘extreme enthusiasm’ nowadays, and people
use the word a lot, so maybe it’s a good choice for a modern name. Haven has a nice,
safe feel to it.
Presenter 2: OK, then there are names which come from nature or animals, although with some of
these it’s hard to know whether they come from nature or a surname – that’s another
trend. Here we have Frost, Wolf, Fox, Bear, for boys, of course. And a new name:
Ridge.
Presenter 1: Ridge, like a mountain ridge? The top of a mountain range?
Presenter 2: Yes, weird, huh? It’s seen as a tough, outdoorsy name for a boy. OK, then there are
musical names. Harmony and Melody have been around for ages, but Lyric is a new
one.
Presenter 1: Lyric, wow!
Presenter 2: Yes, it came in at number 325 in the US a couple of years ago. That doesn’t sound very
popular, but there are so many different names being used at the moment that it means
it isn’t so unusual. Other noun categories are months – May, June and April are
common, but January is uncommon and November very unusual. And then you have
colours. Beyoncé and Jay-Z called their daughter Blue Ivy – a very distinctive name, a
colour plus the name of a plant. Blue is very popular for girls right now, and Red or Grey
for boys.
Presenter 1: I’ve just thought of another category. Food names, like Olive or Clementine.
Presenter 2: Yes, that’s another one. Flower names are pretty common, but food names are unusual.
Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin named their daughter Apple, of course.
Presenter 1: Yes, poor child.
Presenter 2: Actually, Apple is becoming more and more popular, although people think that’s
because of the technology connection, not the fruit. New names always seem strange at
first, but you quickly get used to them, like all the names from places or jobs. Chelsea
and Brooklyn seem like normal names now; they were strange when they were first
Listening skills practice: What’s in a name? – transcript
used. Taylor, Mason, Cooper are all first names from jobs.
Presenter 1: And they are also surnames, I think that’s how they started.
Presenter 2: You’re probably right there.
Presenter 1: What about the Beckhams’ daughter, Harper?
Presenter 2: She was named after Harper Lee, the American novelist who wrote To Kill a
Mockingbird. That’s another trend, naming children after famous writers, musicians – the
British band One Direction have had an effect on names – or fictional characters, like
Bella or Edward from the Twilight series, or Hermione from Harry Potter
Presenter 1: Sorry, can I just interrupt there. I’ve just has a message passed on by the producer. A
listener has just phoned in with a very strange story about a family in Holland with six
children. Their names are all anagrams of the letters: A, E, L and X.
Presenter 2: Ah yes, I’ve heard about this. This family are famous in the world of bloggers on names.
Let me see if I remember the names … Alex and Axel … and Lexa – they’re the easy
ones – Xela (‘Zela’) and Xael (‘Zay-el’) and the last one is Xeal (‘Zeal’) – I’m guessing
about the pronunciations, by the way.
Presenter 1: You mean there are names X-E-L-A and X-A-E-L?
Presenter 2: Yes, but they are very unusual. I think the Dutch family are stopping at six children, but
there are about eighteen more possible anagrams they could use.
Presenter 1: Nooo, you’re kidding!
Presenter 2: All seem horrible to me, but all are possible names. This is similar to another trend of
giving children names all starting with the same letter, like the Kardashian family, all
beginning with K, Kim, Kourtney and so on.
Presenter 1: The Kardashians have had enough publicity, let’s not talk about them. What about your
name? Finn, that sounds like a good Irish name …

You might also like