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Over half-a-million parents shared their unusual name choices with Baby Center over the course of 2012, and the results are in.

In 2012, a baby was named “hashtag.” Little Hashtag Jameson takes the best (or worst) social networking name title away from baby Facebook, who was born last year.

Parents reported to Baby Center that the name’s uniqueness was at the top of their list of concerns in choosing a name for their baby. They also seemed to hope for a fashionable and beautiful child, when it came to girls (though there’s no excuse for “Thinn”) or a weird, wacky or brand-affiliated child, when it came to boys.

Here are a few of the highlights from Baby Center’s very strange list:

Girls:

Fashion-conscious: Couture, Fedora

Rolling Stones fans: Jagger

Altered names: Joshitha

J-names: J’adore, Jazzy, Jeevika, Juju, Jury

Aspirational: Ace, Admire, Excel, Monalisa, Oasis, Queenie

Places: Americus, California, Zealand

Just plain weird: Inny, Yoga

Boys:

Aspirational: Bond, Casanova, Jedi, Legacy, Popeye, Rogue, Elite

Nirvana fans: Cobain

Altered names: Devid, Donathan, Villem, Xenon, Zaniel

Religious: Exodus, Savior

Dad picked this: Espn, Burger, Ball

Just plain weird: Cello, Drifter, Four, Goodluck, Google, Haven’T, Hippo, HToo, Pate

“Pate”? Seriously?

“These parents value creativity and nonconformity above other attributes in a name. Their goal is to come up with a name that is truly unique. By definition, they don’t want to fit in. They want their children to be individuals who stand out from the crowd,” Baby Center’s Global Editor in Chief Linda J. Murray told Yahoo! Shine. “While we’ve all cringed at a baby name here and there, the good news is that most children end up liking their names. Less than 10 percent of adults want to change their name.”

For its most outrageous names of 2012, Nameberry, a baby-naming website, chose “Blue,” inspired by Beyonce and Jay-Z’s bundle of joy Blue Ivy, “Katniss,” the heroine of The Hunger Games, “Hashtag,” “Kingsolomon” (all one word), “Sabbath,” and “Kick,” a middle name chosen by actor Jeremy Sisto for his son, Sebastian.

Earlier this year, Nameberry released its collection of “hottest” baby names of the year, inspired by current popular culture. From Game of Thrones, “Arya,” and “Theon,” were very popular. Also on that list “Cinna,” from The Hunger Games, “Gatsby,” revived by the upcoming remake starring Leonardo DiCaprio, and “Sybil,” from Downton Abbey.

“The celebrity culture has had a tremendous influence as many celebs try to outdo each other with the most original, sometimes outrageous (and publicity-grabbing) name,” Linda Rosenkrantz, co-founder of Nameberry, told Yahoo! Shine. “There is more an emphasis on standing out than fitting in. In the past this attitude had been more prevalent among girls, but the boys’ names are gradually catching up. Parents, who grew up having epidemically popular names like Jennifer and Michael, and felt a lack of individual ownership of their name, are determined that their children won’t be one of six similarly name kids in their class—in a sense they are looking to create a unique brand.”

So there you have it: little baby Espn or Pate, your choice.

(source-Jessica Ferri/Team Mom/shine.yahoo.com)