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| Tuesday, September 14, 1999 Published at 17:10 GMT 18:10 UK UK I name this child ![]() Patsy and Liam: Proud parents Who can know what led the parents of Zowie, Dweezil, Fifi Trixibelle, and Dandelion to come up with the names they did. Whatever David Bowie, Frank Zappa, Bob Geldof and Keith Richards' reasons were, today there is a new recruit to the ranks of celebrities' strangely-named children. Lennon Gallagher.
And actually, bearing in mind some of the names pop stars have chosen in the past, he has got off pretty lightly. Zowie and Dweezil, the children respectively of David Bowie and Frank Zappa, are perhaps the most celebrated examples.
And that's without mentioning Lourdes Ciccone, Chastity Bono, River Phoenix or Sage Stallone. And U2's Bono nearly trumped everyone by calling his son Elijah Bob Patricius Guggi Q Hewson last week.
"I think they do it because they think they are special people, they want to wear special clothes and special sunglasses, go to special parties and special hotels. "So when they have a baby, they want it to be special, and they can't afford to give their child a run-of-the-mill name."
While most of the rest of the country is satisfied with conventional names (Jack and Chloe are the current favourites), there is a wider trend for choosing the unusual. The most recent edition of the Oxford Concise Dictionary of First Names included a whole raft of neo-names. They included Bijou, Gobnat, Beige, Raven, Ace, Baron, Jazz, Stone, Asia, Gypsy, Karma and Zenith.
And in France, a couple who wanted to call their son Zebulon - the equivalent of Zebedee - were told they faced court if the name could expose the child to mockery. Whether Lennon Gallagher does follow in his father's footsteps, Rick Sky believes something awaits him which his parents will not have counted on. "I'm sure at school he'll be called Len, as if his name was Leonard. That will devalue it altogether," he said. | UK Contents
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