leapling
n. A baby born on February 29; a person whose birthday is February 29.
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Examples
2004
Fortunately, kids today with the luck — or misfortune — of being born on the 29th have tools to cope with the complex explanation for their birthdates.

For example, Michelle Whitaker Winfrey, the proud mother of a "leapling" named Miles born Feb. 29, 1992, last year published a children's storybook called "It's My Birthday … Finally! A Leap Year Story."
—Amy Keller, “Stupak's Giant Leap,” Roll Call, February 26, 2004
2001
Statistically, about one in 1,461 births are a leapling; there are an estimated 200,000 in the US and 4.1 million worldwide.
—Schelly Talalay Dardashti, “Happy Birthday…Not!,” The Jerusalem Post, February 23, 2001
2000 (earliest)
Raenell Dawn knows she's lucky. Born on Feb. 29, 1960, she leads the Honor Society of Leap Day Babies, a group of people born on that distinctive day. The group functions primarily through its Web site, www.leapdaybabies.com. …

Wondering what to name your leapling? How about Leapa, Leapanne, or Leaptoria? Haven't figured out what a leapling is? According to the "leaptionary" at Ms. Dawn's Web site, it is a newborn leap day baby.
—Joyce Cohen, “Sites Help Leaplings Bridge Birthday Gap,” The New York Times, February 24, 2000
Notes
Today's bonus post is a kind of digital birthday card to all those leaplings — also known as leapers (1996) or leapyearlings (2004) — born on "Leap Day" (1600), February 29.
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