How common are these stereotypical names in their countries?

>Ireland: Seamus, Patrick, Liam
>Britain: Nigel, Ian, Oliver
>Spain: Fransisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Maria, Ana, Guadalupe
>France: Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Charles, Louis, Antoine
>Germany: Reinhardt, Johann, Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Manfred, Helmut, Ludwig, Siegfried, Sigmund, Friedrich, Friedhelm, Franziska, Hilda, Hildegarde, Helga, Ingrid
>Netherlands: Jan
>Italy: Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio, Marco
>Sweden: Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus
>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Vladimir, Natasha, Svetlana
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
>Turkey: Mehmet
>Middle-East: Mohommad, Abdul, Achmed, Ackbar
>Israel: Shlomo, David, Daniel
>Japan: Things that start with Hiro, Akira, Yoko

My name is Rodrigo, but I don't think its a stereotypical name in either Spain or Mexico.

Oliver is the most common name for newborn boys iirc

never knew anyone named Jesus, the only Jesus I've seen are on american movies.

>Mario
I know some, not many, it's kind of a boomer name
>Luigi
I only know one
>Giovanni
it's common
>Giuseppe
common I guess
>Antonio
kinda southern
>Marco
extremely common

I think Luca is the most common name.

that's a very stereotypical Spanish name, in my head all Spanish posters are Rodrigos or Fernandos

Do people still name their kids Guido? I laughed when I found out Barilla's CEO was named Guido, it's considered a slur in America

my father is named Guido, kys cunt

>Reinhardt
Shields?

...

Ahaha your father sounds like a runt

kek well I'm Mexican. Soon everything Spain is known for will be referred to as Mexican

:^) viva mexico

hang yourselves any time

>Jan
Everyone here is named Henk, this is common knowledge

No has estado en Navarra nunca verdad?
Eso o tienes 10 años

you have to go back etcetera etcetera
imagine there is a smug picture of Trump accompanying this post

To be hones, I know much more people who looks like Jesus than people with that name

KEK

Is Ian a rare name in the us?

what's so funny about the name Guido you haagen das ice cream sounding mother fucker?

it's the Italian version of Guy

>Mohommad
Very common.
>Abdul
Abdul isn't a name. It's abd(slave)ul+(one of allah's names). E.g., abdullah, abdulrahman, abdulqader, etc. And Abdullah is common, kinda.
>Achmed
There isn't "ch" in Arabic. It's ahmed, and it's very common.
>Ackbar
No such name.

Well they are not unusual for someone who is 60+ years old.

no, it's actually extremely common. I know like five American Ians.
t. knower

...

Jean, Jacques, Louis :

Mostly for old people or posh people.

Charles :

Same as above but not as much.

Pierre, Antoine :

There are some. Normal names for X/Y/Z whatever generations. I have no idea about actual statistics of what are the most common first names. My neighborhood is mostly Arabs anyway.

Very common, if we travel back to 1933.

>my father is named Guido

>Guy
but that's a pretty funny name too

>Russia
All of these names, lol. Thats list of average russian names.

Modern Germans are called Luca, Marco, Toni, Lukas etc.

>Sven, Magnus
Some of the most common names among middle-aged men.
>Ragnar, Lars
Not quite as common, and mostly people in their 60's and older have that name.

It's a normal name.

americans, bet their names are Hunter or DeeJay or some other yank bullshit

doesn't sound particularly hilarious 2bh

>mfw I know people with those names

My name is Esteban

Alfonso I don't know many

Not really. I know 4 people with the name.

>Spaniards and their spawns need to put an "E" in front of "St" to pronounce it

Also many of the german names are not very uncommon. Johan, Karl/Carl, Ludvig and Fredrik are probably more common than any of those names.

"""proud""" Italian "muh heritage" types, somehow worse than the Irish

Britain: Rasheed

still Americans and not our problem, still probably named Billy and Cletus.

tengo 27 y en mi franja etaria no hay ningún Jesús, ni en la escuela, ni en el trabajo, mi hermana pequeña tenia un Jesús en su clase pero desapareció, no creo que sea un nombre tan popular aquí.

>hasta
>osteoporosis
>many more words
ste men

>>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Vladimir, Natasha, Svetlana
>No Bogdan

Sorry for being unspecific. You put an E in front of an ST if it would be at the beginning of the word.

I'm not really following you, what is it you want? Something like street?

ostia que no, yo cada lugar que voy encuentro uno, sobre todo boomers y viejos

Jacob (Jake)
Matthew (Matt)
Jeffrey (Jeff)
Dominic (Dom)
Robert (Rob, Bob, Bobby)
Shawn/Sean
Steven (Steve)
Nicolas (Nick)
Christopher (Chris)
Kyle
Edward (Ed)
Vinny
Richard (Rich)
Philip (Phil)
Dale
David (Dave)
Jason
Thomas (Tom, Tommy)
Zachary (Zac)
Brian/Bryan
Jared
Nathan (Nate)

Some of the most common male names I see in real life.

Are you from New Jersey

Nope

>Germany: Reinhardt, Johann, Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Manfred, Helmut, Ludwig, Siegfried, Sigmund, Friedrich, Friedhelm, Franziska, Hilda, Hildegarde, Helga, Ingrid
Basically those are our grandparents' names. The only ones that are more timeless than the rest and generally encountered in all generations are Johann, Karl, Hans, Friedrich and Franziska.

all of those except for maybe ludwig or franziska are rare as hell.

men from 1910-1965: Jan/henk/piet

men from 1965-1975: Rob

KEK just look at him! Is it humanly possible to be even more of a Guido?

>Karl
That's me

My name is Max.
People still ask me how to spell it. I usually say m-a-c-k-s

Are you bavarian by any chance?

As far as I know I'm French, Welsh and German.
My dad has a plaque that has our family name and Neuschwanstein castle carved into it.
My family name doesn't sound very German, but it could just be anglicized to hell.

>French, Welsh and German

That's a rather strange combination.

That's America for you.

What about the following names?

>Italy: Giancazzo
>Poland: Kurosław, Pizdosława
>Hungary: Faszvirág, Picsike
>Russia: Blyadimir

Bloodlines get mixed all the fuck up over here.

I don't know any Seamus', or Patricks, but my grandads name was Liam

Modern male German names:
Hans, Johannes, Max or Maximilian, Christian, Jan, Kevin, Lukas, Jeremy-Pascal, Michael, Stefan, Sören, Markus, Daniel.
Many of these names are just generic white people names found in any country
I don't think Johann is that common. I can't think of anyone with that name. But I know tons of people called Johannes or Johanna (if female), also Hannes and Hans. But not Johann.

All the names listed except for Jesús and Guadalupe are common here.

What about Annika?

I used to want that as a nickname in elementary school cause it's similar to my name.

Too weird in America though so it never caught on. :^(

Is Jesus less common in Argentina than other Latin countries? Because there are a million Mexican Jesuses.

well for most of the elder yes

but for the new genration, most of them got anglo saxon names, kevin, dylan...

without counting the arabs names

I thought Hans was never used by modern Germans?

Pretty common

>yoko is stereotype name

so sad.

I've never met a person named sven in my life

Why is that sad?

>Mohamed
Very common, way too many Mohamed
>Abdul
Doesn't exist alone, it's Abdallah, Abdelkarim, Abdellatif etc... Not rare but not common.
>Ahmed
As common as mohamed, add Mehdi and you probably have 1/3 of Tunisian men desu.
>Ackbar
It doesn't exist

Antonio is very common in Padua

>Japan: Things that start with Hiro, Akira, Yoko

pretty common, though Yoko sounds like a bit old-school one. female names that end with 'ko' were popular until 80's or so, and younger generations consider them oldish, so, not so many couples name their kids in that fashion today. that said, since it was popular for many decades, there still exist lots of women who have '-ko' style name.