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More information than you probably needed.:)
in reply to a message by Katie
If by original you mean the first version used, it's probably Caley on men.Caley /Cayley (& variants) as a surname goes back to at least the 13th century, and pops up occasionally in the UK as a first name - almost entirely on men - from the 18th century onwards. But it's probably unrelated to Kaylee as a portmanteau of Kay and Lee, which seems to have been invented in the US. The earliest one I could find was born in 1887 in South Carolina. It wasn't common at all though until 1985 UK song 'Kayleigh' made the US Hot 100 Billboard chart & went to #2 in the UK:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kayleigh
Here's the US popularity chart:
http://www.behindthename.com/top/name/kaley,kaylee,kayley,kayleighThe writer of Kayleigh said he invented the name from his girlfriend's first names Kay & Lee, but he wasn't the first person to come up with it - first use in the UK was in 1937.I don't really like any of them much, but if I had to choose one I'd probably go for Kaylie.

This message was edited 5/27/2015, 8:15 AM

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No no! I found that really interesting, thank you :)I am now considering Caley on a boy.I think it's just a bit of a name crush at the moment, but I am really interested in naming trends and popularities and how names fall in and out of fashion.
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It'd probably be tricky to have IRL, but Caley on a boy is surprisingly nice - a bit like Caleb, but without that annoying b.:)
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