>Ireland: Seamus, Patrick, Liam
>England: Nigel, Ian, Oliver
>Scotland: Angus
>Spain: Francisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Antonio, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Maria, Ana
>France: Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Marcel, Charles, Louis, Antoine
>Germany: Siegfried, Reinhardt, Johann, Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Manfred, Helmut, Ludwig, Siegfried, Sigmund, Friedrich, Friedhelm, Franziska, Hilda, Hildegarde, Helga, Ingrid
>Netherlands: Jan, Hendrik
>Italy: Mario, Luigi, Giovanni, Giuseppe, Antonio, Marco
>Sweden: Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus, Bjorn, Gustav
>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Vladimir, Mikhail, Alexey, Natalya, Svetlana, Olga
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
>Turkey: Mehmet
>Middle-East: Mohammad, Abdullah, Ahmed
>Israel: Shlomo, David, Daniel, Benjamin, Isaac, Mordecai, Rebecca
>Japan: Akira, Yoko, Things that start with Hiro
How common are these stereotypical names in their countries?
Other urls found in this thread:
express.co.uk
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>Turkey: Mehmet
appreciate not grouping us in with ar*Bs op
Mehmet is quite popular in Turkey, but it's not like as popular as it's Arabic counterpart (Mohammed) is in the UK
>israel
David and Daniel are common
Benjamin, somewhat among religious types
All the other names are somewhat common among 60 y/o or older
>Sergei, Dmitri, Vladimir, Alexey, Natalya, Svetlana, Olga
Extremely widespread.
>Ivan, Boris, Mikhail
Rather rarely used, but not uncommon.
none of those names are common in england except maybe oliver
express.co.uk
Spot on, but Jesús is rare
>Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Marcel, Charles, Louis, Antoine
Jacques and Marcel are not much in use nowadays but where in the 40s and 50s.
Jean is usually use with another name (ex: jean-christophe, jean-françois, jean-pierre...); pierre, charles, louis and antoine are all pretty common.
>Siegfried twice
Really? I only know Mexicans, but there are a shitload of Jesuses.
>Latin America: Spain's + Jesus
>Jesus
Chile it's not Mexico.
>Francisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Antonio, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Maria, Ana
Add: Mario, Marco, Tomás, Camila, Fernanda, Benjamín, Vicente, Florencia, Antonella, Martina, Isabel, Isidora, Maite, Monserrat, Mia, Emily., Maximo, Mateo, Gaspar, Thomas, Santiago, Damian.
Nice try CIA nigger
>Sweden
>Not Mohamed
>Spain + Jesus
Yeah, you can also add the following: David, Daniel, Benjamin, Mario, Antonio.
Pretty common names.
>India
Raj is extremely common, I've never heard of someone with the name Pajeet though.
>Germany: Siegfried, Reinhardt, Johann, Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Manfred, Helmut, Ludwig, Siegfried, Sigmund, Friedrich, Friedhelm, Franziska, Hilda, Hildegarde, Helga, Ingrid
Literally all grandpa names, some like Siegfried and Sigmund are even less common and mostly known from fairytales
Except Manfred (Somehow I know a lot of Manfreds that are in their 40-50s) and Friedrich, Ludwig and Franziska (gaining popularity for upper class babies)
pretty common
>>Sweden: Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus, Bjorn, Gustav
Very common.
Sven and Lars are old timey. The rest you'll find among all ages.
Add: la wea, weon, ctm, maraca, culiao, wn qliu, pasi, que pasai, valdivia, la wea marac ctm wn qlia agregai ls nompbre po
Nope. Jesus is pretty rare, and some of these names aren't used, even in their portuguese version. Also, some italian names became quite popular recently (Enzo, Valentina, Giovanna, Luigi, Lucca).
That's not a real name. That's a Sup Forums invented name.
>England: Nigel, Ian, Oliver
Yeah fairly popular
Dave/David is reaaaaally popular though
even Ragnar?
this is the first time I've heard of that
that's a sick name
I've met a couple.
Is it just pronounced how it's spelt?
>England: Nigel, Ian, Oliver
I know a lot of Ians, Nigel is an old mans name and I do not know a single Oliver.
Patrick is fairly common, seamus and liam are fairly rare now.
If you're speaking English it isn't. Especially not American English.
In my personal experience, Mikhail is as widespread as Dmitri
Rag-nar (like gnarly)
My name is unironically Nigel, only ever met one other Nigel and he was Australian.
Those German ones are old fashioned af and invoke associations with granny panties, these days they're called Mario, Florian and Markus - if they're lucky, Justin and Jerome if they're not.
A shame because they all sound cool