How common are these stereotypical names in their counties?

>Ireland: Seamus, Patrick
>Britain: Nigel, Ian
>Spain: Fransisco, Rodrigo, Hernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis
>France: Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Charles, Louis
>Germany: Reinhardt, Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Franziska
>Netherlands: Jan
>Italy: Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio
>Sweden: Sven, Lars
>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Natasha
>Turkey: Mehmet
>Middel-East: Mohommad, Abdul, Achmed, Ackbar
>Israel: Shlomo
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus

Other urls found in this thread:

behindthename.com/name/leon
beliebte-vornamen.de/25320-jahrzehnte.htm
twitter.com/AnonBabble

My first name is Jesus...

People always say that my full name sounds like the name of a character from a novela.

Feels bad man.

>>Spain
> Francisco*
Common
>Rodrigo
Not rare
>Hernando
meh
>Alejandro
Common
>Juan
Common
>Enrique
Not rare
>Jorge
Common
>Luis
Common

>Jesus, Hernando
No
Maybe Hernan
The others are common here

Sven and Lars is middle-aged man name

Not too many people called Ian or Nigel these days. Most people have americanised names like Jayquan, Jayshawn, Britney or La-a

highly uncommon

>Reinhardt
No
>Wilhelm
Not at all
>Otto
Not really, but there is a comedian named Otto
>Karl
Not really common, but I know at least one Karl
>Hans
No
>Franziska
Rare but existent

Is Jorge really stereotypical or you only know it due to the infamous poster on this board?

Rodrigo sounds medieval, I've never met one.

>Netherlands: Jan
I like Piet more. Both are relatively uncommon though.

I've met one

D'accord Aboubacar.

Ian is a bit popular but most of them are old people names

we americanized now

Nigel isn't so common at all. Perhaps amongst people 40+ but even then I can't say I've ever met one. Ian is pretty common where I'm from (Scotland) as is the alternative spelling Iain.

Not where I live m8.

>Rodrigo
¿alguien dijo 'Rodrigo'?

In Argentina all those Spanish names are common except for Hernando. Hernán is very common, Hernando very rare.

>born in Cuba
>named after grandfather from Galicia
>name is on the list

Second name is Jesus
People think calling me Chucho will make me angry

Also, Jesús is rare in Argentina.
A name that is common here but isnt on the list is Ignacio.

I personally hate being called Chuy... Specially since my dad always calls me like that.

Well it's how it is, since I don't get mad about Chucho everyone just goes back to my 1st name

>Fransisco,
Francisco is common, especially in the northeast
>Rodrigo,
Common
>Hernando,
There's Hernandes, but even that is kinda uncommon. Fernando is pretty common though.
>Alejandro,
Nope. Alexandre is common though
>Juan,
Uncommon. João is common though.
>Enrique,
and Henrique are common
>Jorge,
common
>Luis
common
>Jesus
Not very common

>other common names
Thiago, Felipe, Bruno, Pedro, Gabriel, Marcus

Same here. Fernando is common, Hernando isn't.

>Thiago
santiago tbqh
>Felipe
common
>Bruno
common
>Pedro
common
>Gabriel
common
>Marcus
Marco tbqh


Are portuguese names also that similar to spanish names or it's just Brazil?

Calm down, chuchín.

no one ever calls their child ackbar mike and abdul while exists is very uncommon

>we americanized now
Please don't tell me you guys imported names like Cody or Jayden.

>>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus


>Fransisco
Sure
>Rodrigo
Sure
>Hernando
Nope
>Alejandro
Nope, even less than Alex
>Juan
Not really
>Enrique
Kinda
>Jorge
Sure
>Luis
Kinda
>Jesus
I have met 1 Jesus in my entire life

Sebastian, Roberto, and Benjamin are really popular. You are retarded murrika.

Hernan is popular here too.

No

>Pierre, Charles, Louis
>uncommon

Not everyone live in banlieue you know

lel, I'm actually a Francisco, a Paco in fact.

I know that feel, my first name is Juan and i fucking hate to death being called "Juancho"

idgaf

>Fransisco
Yes
>Rodrigo
Yes
>Hernando
Never hear if it
>Alejandro
Yes
>Juan
Hell yeah
>Enrique
Yes
>Jorge
Yes
>Luis
Yes
>Jesus
Hell yeah

adding...
Jose
Pedro
David
Pablo
Oscar
Roberto
Daniel
Carlos
Javier
Miguel (Miguel Angel)

>Jayquan, Jayshawn

First time i heard those weird anglo names, i'll use them when discussing against gringos.

>Anglo

Mexico has Davids?

>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Natasha
All are breddy gommon.

Jesus sounds based.
After I move to Latin America and find a wife there I'll call my son Jesus.

Plenty, pretty common name

pic related

Shut up, Jayquan.

Kek.

Also, is Guzman really among common surnames in Mexico?

I know a franziska but she's nearly 30. I'm always disapointed with german names, young people have boring names, i want to meet Helmut,Hans, Friedrich, Friedhelm, Hildegarde, Otto...

Tu déconnes ?

I wonder where the quan comes from in jayquan.

>Francisco
Not rare
>Rodrigo
Know about two of them, not common, but not rare
>Hernando
Rare
>Alejandro
Common
>Juan
Common
>Enrique
Common
>Jorge
Not rare
>Luis
Common
>Jesus
Common, my uncle and his son are both Jesus.

Ese mi chucho cartucho.

>Jesus
Not really

Every one of those names are extremely common here in the north.
I know at least one person who is named after every one of those names.
I still wonder why young parents keep naming their kids like that though. Why not give your child a different name? you don't have to look for a weird ass Greek name or anything just give him a less common name.

José is probably the most common name here. Everyone is named José I know at least 10 of them. Whenever I'm talking to a José about another José I have to say his second name or surname because he might confuse him with the third or fourth fucking José

>jose manuel
>jose miguel
>juan jose
>jose luis

It is not rare, quite common I guess, but it isn't in the top 10. The most commun surnames here are: Hernández, García, Martínez, López, González, Rodríguez, Perez, Sanchez, Ramirez, Flores... dunno the rest.

>Pierre, Charles, Louis

Common

>Jean, Jacques

RARE
A
R
E

you forgot josé josé

I never met anyone named Jesus. Must be a mexican thing.

The majority of people in France have now anglo names from TV shows or deformed diminutive names.

My father > pedro
Me > Fernando

Je connais aussi plusieurs Jacques et Jean qui ont la vingtaine hein

...

>Reinhardt, Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Franziska
Almost all mostly found in ages 80+

If you live in beauf area maybe

My surname is García, is common here

It's not uncommon here either. But spanish David doesn't sound like english David. English David would be Deivid for us.

Feels good not having any of those shitty names.

No, I live in reality.
now it's considered ridiculous, uncool and old to have a traditionnal name by the leftists, and they are the majority.

Fellow Garcia brethren here. My classroom since kindergarten has always had at least 8 Gacias.

THAT old? No one younger ever?

That's where they at least peak I'd say, surely you'll find some named like that here and there who are "only" 60 or so

>Mario, Luigi
Meme names
>Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio
very common

Not true, Karl has made a comeback recently amongst obnoxious city-dwelling hipsters. They also tend to Name their kids shit like Friedrich as well

kek, I'm a Martínez and I always had like 3-5 "primos" in my class

But those are god tier names. What's a normal german name, Kevin?

I'm in LA. Not Mexican, but every class has at least one Sanchez.

>>Britain: Nigel, Ian
don't think I've met many people called that
>>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Natasha
very, those probably compose most of the names in russia.

>Kevin
Kek, this is the type name for low class trash and has spawned its own informal "disease" term: Kevinismus
But yeah most kids today get really shitty ones, I absolutely cannot stand non-established Jew stuff like "Noah" (as opposed to Jew ones that have been used here for centuries like Adam, Maria etc those are fine imo), and sorry Spain, but "Leon" (was #1 here for several years) absolutely sucks, always makes me think of the car

So everyone in Germany is named Alex and Lucas and boring names like that?

Nobody is called fucking Leon here.

I'd say that Rodrigo and Hernando are, although well known names (probably due to historical figures), pretty uncommon. I've never met a Rodrigo or a Hernando.

Well it has Spanish origin most probably, either after your province or your word for the animal

THE DASH DON'T BE SILENT

Our equivalents would be Rüdiger and Ferdinand, extremely uncommon, either very old or nobility

behindthename.com/name/leon

It's apparently greek.

>mfw Bruno is more common in Germany than Italy.

my sister have a friend (mexican) called Gabriel, it-s not a rare name for men here in mexico, he moves to germany and he told my sister that germans that read his name always tend to think that Gabriel is a woman

Rodrigo > visigoth name but I don't know if you considered germanic

>León
Yeah, but is not common

Weird, the female one would be Gabriele, which isn't too common, but slightly more so than the male form here I'd say.
On a similar note, I was surprised to find out Andrea is male in Italian, here it's female only

Interesting. What would be very common names among young (20-35) people? I thought Karl was common but it seems not.

Consider * fucking phone

Rodrigo is 100% germanic, as germanic as a spanish name can be.

I've always thought of it as a German name 2bh

and Mario in here is really common desu

here in México Andrea is for women and Andrés is for Men, and now there is this trend to put modified names so you can find kids named Ander or Anders, or instead or Erick you can find Yerick or Edrick...

Here's a list where you can click on the single decades
beliebte-vornamen.de/25320-jahrzehnte.htm
Yeah Andreas is the common male form here

That's because those anglo/french names make no sense for us, used to almost always have an -a if the name is femenine.

Andrea is the italian form for Andrew, Andrés, etc.

Gabriel is common lad

>go to mexico give the name Xabier
>in every hotel they register me as Javier even when i point out it's with an X

>Tfw no one mentioned Manuel

Pero si significa marrón en español.

it-s very rare Xavier... and you use a B instead a V??? jajajaja good luck in México

your forget Gomez
i hate fucking gomez

They were taking revenge on the Méjico internet fight lel

Manuel (m) and Manuela (f) exist here too, not even that rare. Also Jewish though

Jan, Finn and Niels sound nice to me. Timo means 'scam' (as in rip off) in Spanish though. Wouldn't name my kid like that.