How common are these stereotypical names in their countries?

>Ireland: Seamus, Patrick, Liam
>England: Nigel, Ian, Oliver
>Scotland: Angus
>Spain: Fransisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Maria, Ana
>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, Bjorn, Gustav
>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Vladimir, Natalya, Svetlana, Olga
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
>Turkey: Mehmet
>Middle-East: Mohammad, Abdullah, Ahmed
>Israel: Shlomo, David, Daniel
>Japan: Akira, Yoko, Things that start with Hiro

>Scotland: Angus
never even knew that was a name

He gets his beefs mixed up with peoples

Cute pupper.

Im pretty sure Muhammed is the most common name in the UK and Sweden

How common are these stereotypical names in America: Juan, Tyrone, Hector, Jamal, José, Jesús

Come the fuck on dude

>Russia: Ivan, Boris, Vladimir.
I've never met any Ivan, Boris or Vladimir irl, but another names seems very common.

Juan and Jose are very common. I've never actually met a Tyrone or Jamal, I'm pretty sure those are meme names like Sheniqua. I've never met a Jesus either, but I'm sure they're around.

>Sven: 0, old people named can have it with another name as a conjunction, like "Sven-ingvar"
>Lars: Old men
>Ragnar: Maybe old character in old movies. Not really a Swedish name.
>Magnus: Not a "swedish" name
>Bjorn Definitely not a Swedish name. Maybe "Björn", rarely.
Sure, some people might have them as "second names" as any name. But not as first names.
>Gustav. Not as common anymore. But only name here that's actually "Swedish"

>Sweden: Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus, Bjorn, Gustav

I have two of these names


Ragnar is for older people, 40+

>Israel
Ben, Isaac and Noam are probably more common then Schlomo. David is common and I have met a Jewish Israeli named Mordecai.

I'm Hiroxxxx desu. There are a lot of Hiro folks here.

The world chess champion is a Swede named Magnus.

>>Spain: Fransisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Maria, Ana
>Germany: Johann, Hilda, Ingrid
>Italy: Mario, Giovanni, Antonio, Marco
>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Vladimir, Natalya, Olga
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
These are common here
>Israel: David, Daniel

These are pretty common, but mainly the Spain, Italy and Israel ones.

Jesus is always around ;)

I live in LA and have met a million Mexicans and never met a Johann.

Oh, didn't saw that one. I've heard only of one with that name and it's probably written different.

Jan was really common when I was in South Germany

Nearly everyone I knew knew a Jan each

>Johann
No, replace it with Johnathan and maybe
>Sergei
Never heard that one
>Olga
Not very common desu
>Vladimir
I know some, one who has actual Russian family, but not common either

Everything else, yes

Are there really Olgas and Ivans in Mexico? They don't sound Spanish at all.

Iván is really common actually. There are some Olgas here and there, but they are rare.

I'm Dmitriy actualy

I don't find them all rare actually, but not THAT common either. Except for Johann, only the Sebastian one comes to my mind.

Boris is sort of rare, change it to Mikhail\Alexey. Never met a Svetlana, but shitton of Nastyas. Can deliever a list of popular names.

Sergei?
Completely forgot about Joan Sebastian, but still.

Funnily enough I've met people with all of those names except for Sergei.

Hes norwegian

you've had this same thread like 20 times before with the same names, how may times do you need to know?

Is that one really that weird? I've a friend called like that, and my brother had a classmate when he was a kid with that name too. But I've lived in the North and DF, and in Chiapas for like 2 semesters, maybe it's because of that.

Im from the north and ive heard Vladimir, but never Sergei.

Also that Vladimir looked like a literal vampire, and not the high school novel kind, but rather the classic thin, tall, pale, and ugly vampire.

I've heard all of them several times except for Sergei.

I'm not going to post my friend obviously, but here are a couple. Found others while searching one of the ones I talked about.
fb/sergei.lizamaruiz.9
fb/sergei.niebla

What about the user that mentioned the name first though? He should be doing this not me, kek.

The only common one there is Ian.

I've met several Scots called Angus

Just for the record, I'm the one that said they weren't that common actually.

>Jesus
Rare here, most common is other portuguese biblical names, Joao, Luiz, Jorge, Mateus.

>>Sweden: Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus, Bjorn, Gustav

Sven, common, but mostly as a surname.
Lars, very common.
Ragnar, hear it once in a while.
Magnus, common
Bjön. Rare, but not super rare
Gustav, never known anyone with the name, but i suspect it's common.

>Sven, Lars, Ragnar
Old people names.
>Magnus, Gustav
Pretty common. My class had 2 Gustavs in school.
>Björn
Less common but you see it occasionally.

Angus isn't unusual, wouldn't say it's common though

>Jean, Antoine
Very common.

>Jacques
Common among old people.

>Charles, Louis
Common name for richfags

Never met anyone under the age of 60 called nigel or oliver, i know lots of ians though.