How common are these stereotypcial names?

>Britain: Nigel, Ian
>Ireland: Patrick, Seamus
>Spain: Juan, Pedro, Enrique, Esteban, Francisco, Jorge
>France: Pierre, Jacques, Jean
>Germany: Hans, Helmut, Wilhelm, Heinrich, Friedrich, Hermann, Karl, Otto
>Holland: Jan
>Sweden: Sven, Lars
>Italy: Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio
>Russia: Ivan, Dmitri, Sergei
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
>All middle-eastern countries except Israel: Muhammed, Abdul
>Turkey: Mehmet
>Israel: Shlomo
>Japan: Hiro
>China: Wang

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_name
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_surname
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickname
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

>Spain: Juan, Pedro, Enrique, Esteban, Francisco, Jorge
they're all common

esteban not that much

Mohammed is more common than Jan these days.

>Nigel
Not common
>Ian
Pretty common desu senpai

The most common name is Joshua

For Israel Shlomo is not as frequent name as Yosef or Noam

Shlomo is not common at all. 90's were dominated by Yossi (Joseph), but nowadays i don't think there is a stereotypical name among jews.

among arabs, every second girl i hear is named fucking Sheeraz. boys are still muhammad if they are firstborn.

Patrick is way more common than Seamus, former is my middle name

Pierre and Jean : Very common
Jacques : Mostly old people but i know a few young people who bear it.

>Japan: Hiro
I've never seen whose real name is Hiro in here. Hiroshi and Hiroto are common though.

>Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio
they are all old italian names. names of grandpas or names of terroni

Wang is the most common surname in the world, there are over 120 million Wangs.

Kek

I thought Wang was a first name.

Bunp

UK:John Samuel Liam Harry Zayn lol
Which is correct name and nick name,Pete or Peter?

>USA: Jethero, Cleetus, Mary-Lou

How common are these: Tyrone, Jamal, DeMarcus, JaDaLaShawn, Billy Bob, Cletus, and [name] Jr?

Hiro is nick name
hiromi hiroko hiroyuki …ect…

>>Ireland: Patrick, Seamus
correct.
(I hate so much about this country.)

>>Britain: Nigel, Ian
>>Ireland: Patrick, Seamus
>>Spain: Juan, Pedro, Enrique, Esteban, Francisco, Jorge
>>France: Pierre, Jacques, Jean
>>Italy: Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio
>>Russia: Ivan, Dmitri, Sergei

same name translated into different languages:
John- Ian, Jean, Ivan, Giovanni
Jacob- Jacques, Seamus

>>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
and Roman names like Cesar (Ceasar) and Marco Antonio (Marc Anthony)

>t.f.w. no 2-nd given name

USA
>life
>liberty
>pursuit of happiness

no, Chinese, Korean and Japanese names have the familial name in first place (unless in the diaspora).
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_name
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_surname
Peter is full name, Pete is a shortened / informal version,
also, "Pete" is not a nickname.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickname

>>Spain: Juan, Pedro, Enrique, Esteban, Francisco, Jorge
John, Peter, Henry, Steven, Francis, George

Mehmet is very common, it's as stereotypical in Turkey as John is in the USA

Hey ! Nice phonetic orthography test in your image title ! I used a similar system once, where the macrons stood for the 'long' variant of the vowel.

>tfw Tyler

Feels bad

>Germany: Hans, Helmut, Wilhelm, Heinrich, Friedrich, Hermann, Karl, Otto

Mostly generations of 1950-1980 are named that still not that common, i know alot of Karl's though and my 2nd name is Hermann

>61102674
>Britain: Nigel, Ian

How about 'John's and 'Henry's?

>Spain: Juan, Pedro, Enrique, Esteban, Francisco, Jorge

You forget Manuel and their alternates Manolo, Lolo, Manu and others.

Nah, Esteban and Jorge aren't as popular.
And José is popular but they are commonly called Pepe

>France: Pierre, Jacques, Jean

Where is Louis such a Frenchy name itself?

>China: Wang
It's a surname, you faggot

Kevin?
It used to be very popular in the East.

>>Britain: Nigel, Ian
>>Ireland: Patrick, Seamus
>>Spain: Juan, Pedro, Enrique, Esteban, Francisco, Jorge
>>France: Pierre, Jacques, Jean
>>Germany: Hans, Helmut, Wilhelm, Heinrich, Friedrich, Hermann, Karl, Otto
>>Holland: Jan
>>Sweden: Sven, Lars
>>Italy: Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio
>>Russia: Ivan, Dmitri, Sergei
>>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
>>All middle-eastern countries except Israel: Muhammed, Abdul
>>Turkey: Mehmet
>>Israel: Shlomo
>>Japan: Hiro
>>China: Wang

These are all my names.

>Usa: Jamal, Deshawn, Demarcus, Ledasha, Edward

I'm on Sup Forums and i still know 6 people named Jan, so very common.

sad but true

>Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio

Common.

>Mario, Luigi

Only old people.

And as some of you might've noticed, southerners like to call northerners "Ambrogio" here and we like to call them "Ciro" and "Salvatore".

>Esteban

Not common.

>Russia: Ivan, Dmitri, Sergei
Checked as true

Mehmet is the most common name in turkey

Lars is very normal, but probably hard to find anybody under 40 with that name. I have never met a person named Sven, meme-name. It's more common in a double name, like Sven-Erik

I would guess other names on that list like dutch Jan or german Karl and Hans are both way more common than Sven here

No

>Nigel
common amongst men aged 40-60, not so much outside that bracket
>Ian
fairly common amongst all ages

Joshua?

Where the fuck are you?

Those are all common names

Muhammed and Ahmed are very very common, almost every household has one in all MENA countries
Abdul isn't a name
There's Abdullah, Abdulrahman, Abdulqader, Abdulaziz, etc etc (means slave of [one of Allah's 99 names])
Abdullah is the most common of these, of course
Also it depends on the country, for instance in Iraq or other largely Shia populations have a lot of Hussein/Hassan/Ali, a lot more than majority sunni countries though sunnis also name their kids these names sometimes
In the gulf, Abdullah/Abdulaziz/Turki/Faisal/Salem/Fahed/Mashari/Rashed/Khalid/Saud/Sultan/etc are very common male names and not necessarily popular in other MENA countries
Of course when it comes to females there's even more diversity in names and more difference from a place to another

Sandniggers sucks at naming their children

mostly russian immigrants give their kids these classic names

Interesting info, thanks

>Nigel
Not that common
>Ian
Quite common

>tfw Josh

Every man and his dog is called Josh

>tfw don't have a name that sounds like hero

>Mario
pretty common among 50 years olds and older, not very common nowadays.

>Luigi
know very few people with this name myself, still common.

>Giovanni
average, common everywhere

>Giuseppe, Antonio
common in south italy or with somewhat older generations

Is it geo-van-ee or joe-van-ee?

it's giovanni

Ian or Yann is a Breton name.

>tfw Ian
But it isn't very popular here, it'd actually somewhat rare

test

only possible answer, thx

these fuckers can't even pronounce .gif

Giff?

It goes by regions in Spain.

I'm from Catalonia so most common names here are catalan.

>Catalonia: Alex, Pol, Pau, Xavier, Roger, Andreu, Joan, Marc, Gerard

I guess these ones are pretty common

What about Jordi? To me its the most common name in Catalonia

I'd say is more typical than common, if that makes any sense, kinda like Joan desu, although I should have added it to the list too.

>joe-van-ee
that one

Ian is a Scottish name senpai

This. Giovanni, Antonio and Giuseppe are even more common in the south. My first name is Giovanni.

Albania: Toni Blerim