When Adriana Lopez found out that she was pregnant, one of the first places she turned was TikTok.
Immediately, she began to search for posts about morning sickness and other side effects, Lopez recalls. This was the Stockton, Calif., resident’s first pregnancy, and she wanted to be prepared.
But the app soon began pushing her in a direction that made her uncomfortable. During her first trimester, she said, her “For You” page — the TikTok feed where the app’s seemingly psychic algorithm curates an ever-more-personalized stream of videos — filled up with videos about miscarriages. By her second trimester, it had switched over to clips about genetic disorders and stillbirths.
She began to feel paranoid that something would go wrong with her own pregnancy. She tried to use the app’s “Not interested” button to signal that she didn’t want to see any more alarming pregnancy videos, but they kept appearing in her feed; she estimates that by her third trimester, they made up more than half of all the videos that TikTok was showing her. Three of her friends, all of them also pregnant for the first time, told her they were dealing with the same thing.
They weren’t alone. Across the country and around the world, pregnant women are finding themselves pummeled on social media with video after video about the most terrifying aspects of pregnancy.
One woman said she found her Instagram account inundated with posts about birth defects and chromosomal abnormalities.
Another said she kept getting shown “intrusive” YouTube videos about miscarriages.
A third said Facebook has been getting “a little crazy” as she nears her delivery date; it seems to want her to watch videos about the risk of dying in childbirth.
The Los Angeles Times interviewed 13 women, received statements from nine more and reviewed social media posts written by 62 others who’ve all struggled with some version of this problem. A few were able to filter the unwanted content from their feeds by conscientiously adjusting their viewing habits or making use of in-app safety features; many had to choose between abstaining from social media and seeing these videos until they had their babies.
Although other apps also seem susceptible to this problem, the women whom The Times spoke with overwhelmingly cited three specific social media channels as responsible for their anxiety: TikTok’s “For You” feed; Instagram’s TikTok copycat Reels; and Instagram’s Explore page.
Notably, all three rely heavily on algorithms to pick which posts to show users. Although other major platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and Reddit encourage users to curate their feeds in different ways, TikTok, Reels and Explore operate on a more passive model, using behavioral data to round up content users might never have sought out for themselves. Machines, the subtext seems to be, understand what we want better than we do ourselves.

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The experience that Lopez and so many other expectant mothers reported — being identified as pregnant by their online behavior, without having explicitly volunteered that information, and then getting targeted with content focused on the last things that expectant mothers want to be thinking about — may be what happens when that self-driving system runs off the road.
Even under the best of circumstances, pregnancy can be a vulnerable time. Parijat Deshpande, the author of “Pregnancy Brain: A Mind-Body Approach to Stress Management During a High-Risk Pregnancy,” said in an interview that pregnancy changes a woman’s hormonal and immunological profile in ways that can increase the risk of stress.
Although postpartum depression is better known, it’s also common for women to get depressed during a pregnancy, said Vivette Glover, a professor of perinatal psychobiology at Imperial College London. Anxiety and depression each affect about 15% of women around the time of their delivery date, she said, “and they’re equally common in pregnancy and postnatally.”
Pregnant women are also a uniquely lucrative demographic for web platforms to court, with the arrival of a baby bringing new spending on all manner of products — binkies, nursery monitors and more. That makes them a prime target for third-party ads.
Why, then, do these systems serve pregnant users so much content they say they hate? Though the algorithms themselves are largely black boxes, the incentives that guide their parent companies are clear enough: an attention economy built to keep users engaged and online.
“The reality is, people are drawn to extreme content,” said Frances Haugen, the Facebook product manager-turned-whistleblower who last fall helped reveal the extent to which Mark Zuckerberg’s company has been aware of its negative social effects.
For social media companies, catering to users’ “revealed” preferences — i.e. their behavior — rather than their “expressed” or stated preferences often produces more monetizable engagement in the form of time spent, likes and comments.
Users “don’t want to necessarily watch babies dying or miscarriages or whatever,” said Haugen, who has worked on content-ranking algorithms at Facebook and other platforms. “But (it’s a) ‘You can’t avert your eyes’ kind of thing.”
All Kelsey Versteeg wanted to see were cute animals.
She’d been struggling with insomnia during her pregnancy and would find herself up in the middle of the night watching Reels about foster pets. But somehow, the app had also figured out that the 39-year-old Oakland, Calif., resident was going to have a baby soon, and so it began pushing her video after video about pregnancies.
Some of the posts, though not really her thing, were inoffensive enough — videos about gender reveal parties or families with twins and triplets, she said. But a lot of them were what she took to calling “bleak baby content.” As with Lopez on TikTok, Instagram had started steering Versteeg toward stories about stillbirths, extremely premature babies and babies with severe health problems.
“Reels would always start with the cat and puppy stuff that I actually wanted to see, and then this would be pushed into my feed,” she said. “I’d try to swipe it away so I wouldn’t see it, but it seemed like they really tried to push that in.”
The fetal scans and blood tests that pregnant women have to do all the time are stressful enough, Versteeg said, without also constantly absorbing other women’s medical trauma online. But it was hard to avoid the clips, she said; many of them started off innocuous, only to pivot toward tragedy at the end. They made her anxious.
Versteeg wasn’t searching for this content, she said, and didn’t follow any accounts focused on it. She even tried swiping past everything that seemed remotely baby-related. Still, the nightmarish content spewed forth.
“I think when you are pregnant you are curious what could go wrong,” she said. “But it just seems so unhealthy to lead someone down that path.”
Haugen, the whistleblower, said that the time someone spends watching a video is one of the factors TikTok uses to decide what else to show them. The company has also said that recommendations are based on signals such as a user’s likes and comments; leaked documents indicate that time spent on-app and user retention are key metrics for the company.
Meanwhile, Instagram says that its Explore algorithm considers what previous posts a user has liked, saved or responded to in order to offer new content they’re likely to further engage with; and that Reels is “specifically focused on what might entertain” someone, as predicted based on factors such as what posts they’ve previously engaged with and how popular a given content creator is.
That these signals seem able to so easily figure out when a woman is pregnant could come to bear outsize importance if the Supreme Court overturns Roe vs. Wade, as it seems poised to do. If a woman’s online data indicate she’s pregnant but she never gives birth, the New York Times’ Zeynep Tufekci recently noted, it could mark her as a target for investigation in the many states where abortion may soon become illegal.
A TikTok spokesperson told The Times that the platform doesn’t track users’ pregnancy status. In a blog post in December, the company wrote that it was “working to recognize if our system may inadvertently be recommending only very limited types of content that, though not violative of our policies, could have a negative effect,” such as content about weight loss or loneliness.
A spokesperson for Meta, the parent company of both Facebook and Instagram, said in an email that “parents use Instagram to get advice, share their experiences, and seek support from other parents, including when their children have special needs. Our recommendations allow people in this community to find one another, but they can always let us know in the app if they’re not interested in something recommended to them.”
The company also supports regulation that would set clear industry standards on this topic, the spokesperson said.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Monkey Business Images // Shutterstock
No matter how unusual the name, chances are someone has at some point tried assigning it to a baby. You have to wonder what some parents are thinking. Who looks at their little bundle of joy and decides “Hashtag” would be the perfect name?
Stacker scoured hundreds of baby name databases and news releases to curate a list of baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world, along with explanations for why they’re banned.
Sometimes a little creativity leads to lovely, unique names. Other times, thinking outside the box has disastrous consequences. Governments around the world have taken it upon themselves to outlaw certain offensive, baffling, or downright ridiculous baby names to save kids everywhere from decades of embarrassment, confusion, and bullying. Still, not all laws make perfect sense—what’s wrong with the name “Linda” anyway?
Read on to find out which six-word name was banned in New Zealand, which country won’t allow you to name little girls “Sarah,” and which nation did not approve of naming a child after a deadly poison.
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Monkey Business Images // Shutterstock
No matter how unusual the name, chances are someone has at some point tried assigning it to a baby. You have to wonder what some parents are thinking. Who looks at their little bundle of joy and decides “Hashtag” would be the perfect name?
Stacker scoured hundreds of baby name databases and news releases to curate a list of baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world, along with explanations for why they’re banned.
Sometimes a little creativity leads to lovely, unique names. Other times, thinking outside the box has disastrous consequences. Governments around the world have taken it upon themselves to outlaw certain offensive, baffling, or downright ridiculous baby names to save kids everywhere from decades of embarrassment, confusion, and bullying. Still, not all laws make perfect sense—what’s wrong with the name “Linda” anyway?
Read on to find out which six-word name was banned in New Zealand, which country won’t allow you to name little girls “Sarah,” and which nation did not approve of naming a child after a deadly poison.
You may also like: 87 top rated charities to support military members and their families

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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
foto-select // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The name of the leader of Nazi Germany.
- Reason for ban: It’s offensive.
Several countries have forbidden future children from being named after the genocidal German dictator, but the United States isn’t one of them. Here, where we’re known for lax naming laws, a New Jersey family created controversy in 2008 when they ordered a birthday cake with their 3-year-old son’s name on it: “Adolf Hitler Campbell.”
foto-select // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The name of the leader of Nazi Germany.
- Reason for ban: It’s offensive.
Several countries have forbidden future children from being named after the genocidal German dictator, but the United States isn’t one of them. Here, where we’re known for lax naming laws, a New Jersey family created controversy in 2008 when they ordered a birthday cake with their 3-year-old son’s name on it: “Adolf Hitler Campbell.”
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
f11photo // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Devil.
- Reason for ban: Japanese officials sought to protect a child from mockery.
When parents register newborn babies in Japan, they must choose a name written in official Japanese characters, or kanji. While “Akuma” technically fulfills that requirement, the government intervened in 1993 when two parents gave the name to their newborn son.
f11photo // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Devil.
- Reason for ban: Japanese officials sought to protect a child from mockery.
When parents register newborn babies in Japan, they must choose a name written in official Japanese characters, or kanji. While “Akuma” technically fulfills that requirement, the government intervened in 1993 when two parents gave the name to their newborn son.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
GroupArt // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Presumably, it means “all powerful.”
- Reason for ban: Children can’t have more than two names.
The local government in Sonora, Mexico, prevents children from being registered with names that might be construed as derogatory, pejorative, discriminatory, or devoid of meaning—or that would expose kids to ridicule. We can only imagine the mean rhymes the classmates of little “All Power” would come up with.
GroupArt // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Presumably, it means “all powerful.”
- Reason for ban: Children can’t have more than two names.
The local government in Sonora, Mexico, prevents children from being registered with names that might be construed as derogatory, pejorative, discriminatory, or devoid of meaning—or that would expose kids to ridicule. We can only imagine the mean rhymes the classmates of little “All Power” would come up with.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Hany Musallam // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Prince.
- Reason for ban: Saudi Arabian citizens cannot name their children anything that relates to royalty.
Parents looking to improve a kid’s social status by naming him or her something aristocratic better not move to Saudi Arabia. Royal terms like Sumuw (highness), Malika (queen), and Al Mamlaka (the kingdom) are all off-limits.
Hany Musallam // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Prince.
- Reason for ban: Saudi Arabian citizens cannot name their children anything that relates to royalty.
Parents looking to improve a kid’s social status by naming him or her something aristocratic better not move to Saudi Arabia. Royal terms like Sumuw (highness), Malika (queen), and Al Mamlaka (the kingdom) are all off-limits.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Petr Pohudka // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The name of a tribe of people originally from Ghana.
- Reason for ban: The Portuguese government’s ban on this name doesn’t have anything to do with the early 2000s singer, but with the origin of the name itself. Portugal favors traditionally Portuguese names. Similar to Denmark, parents have to choose from a vetted list.
Petr Pohudka // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The name of a tribe of people originally from Ghana.
- Reason for ban: The Portuguese government’s ban on this name doesn’t have anything to do with the early 2000s singer, but with the origin of the name itself. Portugal favors traditionally Portuguese names. Similar to Denmark, parents have to choose from a vetted list.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Taras Vyshnya // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: One can only assume it means someone with a water pipe for a noggin.
- Reason for ban: It’s offensive.
Though the state of Victoria released a list of 46 banned names in 2016, Australia only outlaws 17 especially derogatory ones.
Taras Vyshnya // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: One can only assume it means someone with a water pipe for a noggin.
- Reason for ban: It’s offensive.
Though the state of Victoria released a list of 46 banned names in 2016, Australia only outlaws 17 especially derogatory ones.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
f11photo // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Unclear, but the parents claimed it should be pronounced “Albin.”
- Reason for ban: It isn’t a name.
Swedish naming law states, in part, that “names which for some obvious reason are not suitable as a first name” will not be approved. This 43-character alphanumeric monstrosity of a moniker—which two parents tried to give their son in protest of the country’s naming laws—clearly fits that description.
f11photo // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Unclear, but the parents claimed it should be pronounced “Albin.”
- Reason for ban: It isn’t a name.
Swedish naming law states, in part, that “names which for some obvious reason are not suitable as a first name” will not be approved. This 43-character alphanumeric monstrosity of a moniker—which two parents tried to give their son in protest of the country’s naming laws—clearly fits that description.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Tsuguliev // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A free person.
- Reason for ban: The Icelandic alphabet doesn’t include the letter “c.”
In a very practical move, Iceland doesn’t allow its citizens to give their children names that can’t be written with the Icelandic alphabet or pronounced with proper Icelandic grammar.
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Tsuguliev // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A free person.
- Reason for ban: The Icelandic alphabet doesn’t include the letter “c.”
In a very practical move, Iceland doesn’t allow its citizens to give their children names that can’t be written with the Icelandic alphabet or pronounced with proper Icelandic grammar.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Patrick Foto // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Smelly head.
- Reason for ban: The Malaysian government doesn’t allow pejorative words as names.
Chow Tow, which means “smelly head” in Cantonese, is off-limits in Malaysia and parts of nearby Australia. Malaysia also disallows numbers, Japanese car names, and royal titles in monikers.
Patrick Foto // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Smelly head.
- Reason for ban: The Malaysian government doesn’t allow pejorative words as names.
Chow Tow, which means “smelly head” in Cantonese, is off-limits in Malaysia and parts of nearby Australia. Malaysia also disallows numbers, Japanese car names, and royal titles in monikers.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Sven Hansche // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A deadly poison.
- Reason for ban: The moniker might bring harm to the child in the future.
A U.K. court intervened after a British woman named her twins “Cyanide” and “Preacher.” The determination was that neither name would be appropriate for a child, and specifically stated the name “Cyanide” could be interpreted as a rejection of the girl by her mother.
Sven Hansche // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A deadly poison.
- Reason for ban: The moniker might bring harm to the child in the future.
A U.K. court intervened after a British woman named her twins “Cyanide” and “Preacher.” The determination was that neither name would be appropriate for a child, and specifically stated the name “Cyanide” could be interpreted as a rejection of the girl by her mother.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Dennis van de Water // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The Spanish form of Heinrich, Germanic for “powerful ruler of the home.”
- Reason for ban: Foreign names are generally not allowed in Iceland.
Like “Carolina,” this name can’t be assigned to a person in Iceland because “Enrique” can’t be pronounced using traditional Icelandic grammar.
Dennis van de Water // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The Spanish form of Heinrich, Germanic for “powerful ruler of the home.”
- Reason for ban: Foreign names are generally not allowed in Iceland.
Like “Carolina,” this name can’t be assigned to a person in Iceland because “Enrique” can’t be pronounced using traditional Icelandic grammar.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: The social media platform and website.
- Reason for ban: The Mexican state prohibits names “lacking in meaning.”
Sadly, your obsession with viral videos doesn’t give you license to name your child “Facebook”—at least, not in Sonora, Mexico. The state prohibits names devoid of meaning (no matter how meaningful one may personally find the social networking site), those which might adversely affect a child later in life, and those that could be construed as derogatory.
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Canva
- Name meaning: The social media platform and website.
- Reason for ban: The Mexican state prohibits names “lacking in meaning.”
Sadly, your obsession with viral videos doesn’t give you license to name your child “Facebook”—at least, not in Sonora, Mexico. The state prohibits names devoid of meaning (no matter how meaningful one may personally find the social networking site), those which might adversely affect a child later in life, and those that could be construed as derogatory.
You may also like: Pets banned in every state
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Artur Jakucewicz // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Strawberry.
- Reason for ban: It’s embarrassing and too similar to a slang term.
Though French parents have the leeway to name their kids anything they like, local prosecutors can report questionable names to the higher court. A judge in 2015 ruled that the name “Fraise” was too similar to “ramène ta fraise,” which loosely translates to “get your butt over here.” The name, the court determined, was therefore inappropriate.
Artur Jakucewicz // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Strawberry.
- Reason for ban: It’s embarrassing and too similar to a slang term.
Though French parents have the leeway to name their kids anything they like, local prosecutors can report questionable names to the higher court. A judge in 2015 ruled that the name “Fraise” was too similar to “ramène ta fraise,” which loosely translates to “get your butt over here.” The name, the court determined, was therefore inappropriate.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
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- Name meaning: Bridge.
- Reason for ban: It’s not on the Norwegian government’s list of approved names.
Kirsti Larsen said the name “Gesher”—the Hebrew word for “bridge”—came to her in a dream. But since it wasn’t included on the official government list of approved names, she was asked to change it or pay a fine of 1,600 kroner. Larsen refused and ended up serving two days in jail.
Canva
- Name meaning: Bridge.
- Reason for ban: It’s not on the Norwegian government’s list of approved names.
Kirsti Larsen said the name “Gesher”—the Hebrew word for “bridge”—came to her in a dream. But since it wasn’t included on the official government list of approved names, she was asked to change it or pay a fine of 1,600 kroner. Larsen refused and ended up serving two days in jail.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: An all-powerful being.
- Reason for ban: Several names explicitly tied to religion are banned.
The Australian state doesn’t allow parents to give their children any religious monikers. That includes names like “Jesus” and “Bishop.”
Canva
- Name meaning: An all-powerful being.
- Reason for ban: Several names explicitly tied to religion are banned.
The Australian state doesn’t allow parents to give their children any religious monikers. That includes names like “Jesus” and “Bishop.”
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
VG Foto // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: “Harry” comes from the German “Heri,” or “army,” but the name is more closely attributed to the fictional wizard and namesake of J.K. Rowling’s fantasy novels.
- Reason for ban: It could cause embarrassment and bullying.
While many people may adore J.K. Rowling’s boy wizard, the Sonoran government doesn’t think any kid should have to grow up in Harry Potter’s shadow.
VG Foto // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: “Harry” comes from the German “Heri,” or “army,” but the name is more closely attributed to the fictional wizard and namesake of J.K. Rowling’s fantasy novels.
- Reason for ban: It could cause embarrassment and bullying.
While many people may adore J.K. Rowling’s boy wizard, the Sonoran government doesn’t think any kid should have to grow up in Harry Potter’s shadow.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Marek Masik // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Three, or the third.
- Reason for ban: It’s inherently confusing.
Thomas Boyd Ritchie III tried to change his name to the Roman numeral “III” in California, saying he already uses it as a nickname with friends and acquaintances. The court disagreed, however, stating symbols or numbers alone don’t constitute a name—and that Californians must have a first and last name.
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Marek Masik // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Three, or the third.
- Reason for ban: It’s inherently confusing.
Thomas Boyd Ritchie III tried to change his name to the Roman numeral “III” in California, saying he already uses it as a nickname with friends and acquaintances. The court disagreed, however, stating symbols or numbers alone don’t constitute a name—and that Californians must have a first and last name.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
f11photo // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A chain of Swedish furniture superstores.
- Reason for ban: It’s not appropriate for a child’s name.
For starters, the multinational furniture company has a trademark on its name. The moniker also flies in the face of the Australian government’s policy to not allow name assignments that aren’t in a child’s (or the public’s) best interest.
f11photo // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A chain of Swedish furniture superstores.
- Reason for ban: It’s not appropriate for a child’s name.
For starters, the multinational furniture company has a trademark on its name. The moniker also flies in the face of the Australian government’s policy to not allow name assignments that aren’t in a child’s (or the public’s) best interest.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Lev Kropotov // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A desktop computer produced by Apple.
- Reason for ban: It’s an object, not a person’s name.
Naming a child after a popular computer—no matter how high-quality—doesn’t exactly show the world how much you love and care for your son or daughter.
Lev Kropotov // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A desktop computer produced by Apple.
- Reason for ban: It’s an object, not a person’s name.
Naming a child after a popular computer—no matter how high-quality—doesn’t exactly show the world how much you love and care for your son or daughter.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Osama Ahmed Mansour // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Soft, tender; beautiful.
- Reason for ban: It’s foreign.
The Saudi Arabian government actually takes issue with several Western girls’ names. These include other seemingly benign names such as “Alice” and “Elaine.”
Osama Ahmed Mansour // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Soft, tender; beautiful.
- Reason for ban: It’s foreign.
The Saudi Arabian government actually takes issue with several Western girls’ names. These include other seemingly benign names such as “Alice” and “Elaine.”
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Matt Gush // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Graceful light.
- Reason for ban: Accents and special characters aren’t permitted in California.
California only allows names written using the 26 letters of the English alphabet. That means no special characters, numbers, or accents.
Matt Gush // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Graceful light.
- Reason for ban: Accents and special characters aren’t permitted in California.
California only allows names written using the 26 letters of the English alphabet. That means no special characters, numbers, or accents.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
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- Name meaning: The devil.
- Reason for ban: It’s derogatory.
From 2001 to 2013, six sets of New Zealand parents attempted to name their children “Lucifer.” Luckily for the newborns, the New Zealand Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages has to approve all names. This devilish one didn’t make the cut.
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Canva
- Name meaning: The devil.
- Reason for ban: It’s derogatory.
From 2001 to 2013, six sets of New Zealand parents attempted to name their children “Lucifer.” Luckily for the newborns, the New Zealand Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages has to approve all names. This devilish one didn’t make the cut.
You may also like: Stunning images of farming around the world
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
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- Name meaning: Unknown.
- Reason for ban: It’s inappropriate.
Each year, New Zealand officials have to turn down a bevy of unusual name requests by parents. Since 2001, the monikers most commonly shot down are “Justice” and “King.” “Mafia No Fear” was requested just once.
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- Name meaning: Unknown.
- Reason for ban: It’s inappropriate.
Each year, New Zealand officials have to turn down a bevy of unusual name requests by parents. Since 2001, the monikers most commonly shot down are “Justice” and “King.” “Mafia No Fear” was requested just once.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: King.
- Reason for ban: This title is reserved solely for royalty.
As a monarchy, Saudi Arabia bans the use of all kinds of regal names by commoners. And don’t even think about “Malika”—the word for “queen.”
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- Name meaning: King.
- Reason for ban: This title is reserved solely for royalty.
As a monarchy, Saudi Arabia bans the use of all kinds of regal names by commoners. And don’t even think about “Malika”—the word for “queen.”
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: The last name of legendary soccer player Lionel Messi.
- Reason for ban: Last names can’t be used as first names.
Soccer fans in Lionel Messi’s hometown seeking to pay tribute to their sports hero by naming infants after him are out of luck—at least, if they want to use the last name “Messi” as a child’s first name. The town specifically outlawed the moniker due to such a large volume of parents assigning the name to their children. “Lionel,” however, is still fair game!
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- Name meaning: The last name of legendary soccer player Lionel Messi.
- Reason for ban: Last names can’t be used as first names.
Soccer fans in Lionel Messi’s hometown seeking to pay tribute to their sports hero by naming infants after him are out of luck—at least, if they want to use the last name “Messi” as a child’s first name. The town specifically outlawed the moniker due to such a large volume of parents assigning the name to their children. “Lionel,” however, is still fair game!
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Oleksiy Mark // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A primate.
- Reason for ban: It’s inappropriate and could lead to bullying.
Naming a human being after an animal—even one we’re distantly related to—doesn’t exactly have positive connotations. The moniker is not part of Denmark’s approved list of thousands of names for parents to choose from.
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Oleksiy Mark // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A primate.
- Reason for ban: It’s inappropriate and could lead to bullying.
Naming a human being after an animal—even one we’re distantly related to—doesn’t exactly have positive connotations. The moniker is not part of Denmark’s approved list of thousands of names for parents to choose from.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
prochasson frederic // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A popular chocolate-hazelnut spread.
- Reason for ban: It’s too similar to a well-known food.
A French court ruled that sharing a name with a breakfast food commonly found on European breakfast tables was “contrary to the child’s interest.” The child was renamed Ella.
prochasson frederic // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: A popular chocolate-hazelnut spread.
- Reason for ban: It’s too similar to a well-known food.
A French court ruled that sharing a name with a breakfast food commonly found on European breakfast tables was “contrary to the child’s interest.” The child was renamed Ella.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: The name of the former leader of al-Qaeda.
- Reason for ban: It’s offensive.
Germany stopped a Turkish couple from naming their child after the al-Qaeda leader, noting the family’s home country wouldn’t allow the name, either.
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- Name meaning: The name of the former leader of al-Qaeda.
- Reason for ban: It’s offensive.
Germany stopped a Turkish couple from naming their child after the al-Qaeda leader, noting the family’s home country wouldn’t allow the name, either.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
AMPG // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The elected head of a government.
- Reason for ban: It’s confusing.
Much as you might admire your country’s head of state, it’s probably not a good idea to give the title to your first-born.
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AMPG // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: The elected head of a government.
- Reason for ban: It’s confusing.
Much as you might admire your country’s head of state, it’s probably not a good idea to give the title to your first-born.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: Possibly the best-known dwarf planet in the universe.
- Reason for ban: It’s inappropriate.
Sorry, science geeks: Denmark’s Law on Personal Names still doesn’t permit the name “Pluto.” The law holds, even after 2006 when Pluto was demoted to “dwarf planet” status.
Canva
- Name meaning: Possibly the best-known dwarf planet in the universe.
- Reason for ban: It’s inappropriate.
Sorry, science geeks: Denmark’s Law on Personal Names still doesn’t permit the name “Pluto.” The law holds, even after 2006 when Pluto was demoted to “dwarf planet” status.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: Pure, happy; princess.
- Reason for ban: It’s not traditionally Moroccan.
Moroccan parents must choose baby names from a government-approved list that fit the “Moroccan identity.” The Hebrew name “Sarah” did not make the cut.
Canva
- Name meaning: Pure, happy; princess.
- Reason for ban: It’s not traditionally Moroccan.
Moroccan parents must choose baby names from a government-approved list that fit the “Moroccan identity.” The Hebrew name “Sarah” did not make the cut.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: Someone who stinks.
- Reason for ban: It’s derogatory.
Now that’s just mean. Australian officials thankfully kept at least one child from unwittingly being forced into a lifetime of mockery.
Canva
- Name meaning: Someone who stinks.
- Reason for ban: It’s derogatory.
Now that’s just mean. Australian officials thankfully kept at least one child from unwittingly being forced into a lifetime of mockery.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: A short man; also the name of a murdered South African teen activist.
- Reason for ban: It might lead to bullying or ridicule.
Whether the parents wanted to pay a tribute to the young anti-apartheid figure Stompie Moeketsi or just thought the name was cute, German officials rejected the name “Stompie” to prevent the child from being teased.
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- Name meaning: A short man; also the name of a murdered South African teen activist.
- Reason for ban: It might lead to bullying or ridicule.
Whether the parents wanted to pay a tribute to the young anti-apartheid figure Stompie Moeketsi or just thought the name was cute, German officials rejected the name “Stompie” to prevent the child from being teased.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
DmitrySerbin // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Irish pop band in the mid-2000s.
- Reason for ban: It exposes the child to ridicule.
After her parents named her “Talula Does the Hula From Hawaii,” the child eventually began introducing herself to friends as simply “K.” She suffered so much embarrassment and teasing that a family court judge actually put her into court guardianship so her name could be changed.
DmitrySerbin // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Irish pop band in the mid-2000s.
- Reason for ban: It exposes the child to ridicule.
After her parents named her “Talula Does the Hula From Hawaii,” the child eventually began introducing herself to friends as simply “K.” She suffered so much embarrassment and teasing that a family court judge actually put her into court guardianship so her name could be changed.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: A Swiss cartoon character and comic series.
- Reason for ban: Comparisons to the comic strip weren’t in the child’s best interests.
Though paying an homage to pop culture in your child’s name wouldn’t cause anyone to blink an eye in the United States, the French take a much stricter view. A court there ruled a boy could not be named after the popular, cowlicked comic strip character.
Canva
- Name meaning: A Swiss cartoon character and comic series.
- Reason for ban: Comparisons to the comic strip weren’t in the child’s best interests.
Though paying an homage to pop culture in your child’s name wouldn’t cause anyone to blink an eye in the United States, the French take a much stricter view. A court there ruled a boy could not be named after the popular, cowlicked comic strip character.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: An homage to the United States Navy military branch.
- Reason for ban: It’s lacking in meaning and could be used as pejorative.
Believe it or not, at least one person attempted to name their child “Usnavy” in the past few years, prompting the local government to formally ban the name. One can’t help but wonder if the parents were inspired by the name of the lead character in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Tony-winning Broadway musical, “In the Heights.”
Canva
- Name meaning: An homage to the United States Navy military branch.
- Reason for ban: It’s lacking in meaning and could be used as pejorative.
Believe it or not, at least one person attempted to name their child “Usnavy” in the past few years, prompting the local government to formally ban the name. One can’t help but wonder if the parents were inspired by the name of the lead character in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Tony-winning Broadway musical, “In the Heights.”
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: The Italian word for “Friday.”
- Reason for ban: It could cause mockery and bullying.
An Italian court ordered the parents of this little boy to rename him “Gregorio,” saying the original name was associated with “subservience and inferiority” in Daniel Defoe’s novel “Robinson Crusoe.”
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- Name meaning: The Italian word for “Friday.”
- Reason for ban: It could cause mockery and bullying.
An Italian court ordered the parents of this little boy to rename him “Gregorio,” saying the original name was associated with “subservience and inferiority” in Daniel Defoe’s novel “Robinson Crusoe.”
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Mihai_Andritoiu // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Five times 10.
- Reason for ban: It’s a number.
Very few states have any laws prohibiting names, but New Jersey does have one. Numbers, symbols, and curse words are all off-limits.
Mihai_Andritoiu // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: Five times 10.
- Reason for ban: It’s a number.
Very few states have any laws prohibiting names, but New Jersey does have one. Numbers, symbols, and curse words are all off-limits.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
Canva
- Name meaning: Full stop.
- Reason for ban: It’s not a name and could cause confusion.
How would you even pronounce this? “Period”? “Full stop”? “Dot”? Needless to say, New Zealand won’t allow you to name your child with punctuation.
Canva
- Name meaning: Full stop.
- Reason for ban: It’s not a name and could cause confusion.
How would you even pronounce this? “Period”? “Full stop”? “Dot”? Needless to say, New Zealand won’t allow you to name your child with punctuation.
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40 baby names that are illegal somewhere in the world
tamir niv // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: At. In Chinese, it’s pronounced “ai-ta” which sounds similar to “love him” in Chinese.
- Reason for ban: It’s a symbol.
Chinese parents technically can choose any name they’d like for their kids. That said, people are encouraged to choose baby names that can easily be read or scanned by a computer on a Resident Identity Card, the country’s official identification document. Symbols aren’t allowed, and simplified Chinese characters are encouraged over traditional ones.
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tamir niv // Shutterstock
- Name meaning: At. In Chinese, it’s pronounced “ai-ta” which sounds similar to “love him” in Chinese.
- Reason for ban: It’s a symbol.
Chinese parents technically can choose any name they’d like for their kids. That said, people are encouraged to choose baby names that can easily be read or scanned by a computer on a Resident Identity Card, the country’s official identification document. Symbols aren’t allowed, and simplified Chinese characters are encouraged over traditional ones.
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