Illegal baby names UK: What names can you not legally call your child?
More than one UK Royal Family names make Portugal's banned list
Naming a baby is a wonderful moment in a new parent's life, but one thing that they might not immediately think about is the legality of the baby's name.
Here's how you can name your baby without having a run in with the law.
Are there any banned baby names in the UK?
In the UK, names that may carry a risk of harm to a child are likely to be rejected by the Registering Officer.
This includes names that contain obscenities, numerals, misleading titles or names that are impossible to pronounce.
For example in 2016, a mum in Wales was banned from calling her daughter Cyanide.
This is because her child would share her name with a lethal poison.
What can you not legally call your child in the UK?
Britain doesn't have any hard and fast laws about banned names, unlike Iceland who only accepts names chosen from a pre-agreed government list.
In almost all cases, so long as the name isn't fraudulent, you are free to call your baby whatever you want.
The very few forbidden names in the UK include Martian, Monkey and Akuma, meaning devil, according to .
What baby names are banned or illegal around the world?
Different countries have different rules when it comes to what you can name your baby.
Some have rules banning special characters, like @, from baby names, or only accept names in the national language.
In 2018, a French couple were banned from calling their baby daughter Liam after French authorities stepped in saying it "would be likely to create a risk of gender confusion" and “therefore contrary to the interest of the child and could harm her in social relations”.