So I found this to be a really interesting question, because yeah, Chuck and Brandon are “default American” names to me.
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@astronomerritt some names I'd assume the bearer was Irish:
Seamus
Angus
Ciarán
Fergus
Lochlan
Sinead
RóisínActually it's interesting. Scanning through lists of irish boys names, I recognize a lot of them but associate them with Ireland. For the girls names, I either recognize none of them, or they're all like Kate, Sophie, Lilly, Amy, which I consider so widespread to be generic. Nothing in-between where it's a name I recognize but wouldn't expect to find much outside of Ireland.
@astronomerritt I wonder if that's a function of the names' actual spread, or my perception?
Does Hollywood/media only pick traditional names when it's a boy?
Are names like "Kate" just so popular that everyone uses them? -
@Artemis201 I would immediately assume an Angus to be Scottish and a Lachlan or Lochlan to 100% be Australian!
@astronomerritt oh yeah, I guess Angus is more Scottish. I just scanned through a list of Irish baby boy names and picked out the ones I was familiar with.
Lochlan I've never heard as Australian. But also I don't know a ton of names I tie to Australia -
@skribe @astronomerritt poor wee bugger, hope he was ale to change it.
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@astronomerritt I wonder if that's a function of the names' actual spread, or my perception?
Does Hollywood/media only pick traditional names when it's a boy?
Are names like "Kate" just so popular that everyone uses them?@Artemis201 I mean, Ireland basically uses very similar names to the UK but with a lot of Irish names thrown in.
There’s some names I’d consider default Irish in comparison to the UK though, like John Paul, Gerard, most female variations of male names like Geraldine or Bernadette, Maurice pronounced “Morris”, double-barrelled girls’ names in general.
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@astronomerritt oh yeah, I guess Angus is more Scottish. I just scanned through a list of Irish baby boy names and picked out the ones I was familiar with.
Lochlan I've never heard as Australian. But also I don't know a ton of names I tie to Australia@Artemis201 Apparently it’s a super popular name in Australia: it’s Scottish in origin but idk, just seems to have caught on over there

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@Artemis201 Ah no, specifically John Paul together! Boys named after the Pope, as you’d know yourself. The hyphen is more or less optional, most of the John Pauls I’ve known haven’t had the hyphen.
I’d say most of the names you’ve listed are really common in the mainland UK too, so not seen as specifically Catholic there. Things can be different up here in NI… as usual

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@pthime First of all, this is wonderful, thank you for your contributions to the totally legitimate field of Global Name Science. (Actually, that probably is a legit field…) Glad to be vindicated when it comes to Brandon.
As you’re likely aware, the obvious issue with Chuck is that it’s a nickname so most US Chucks are of course Charleses. And it’s absolutely wild that there’s apparently so many Chads in Chad?? Is that really a thing? I need to look at where this data comes from, actually.
Gonna mess with this myself for a bit…
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@pthime @astronomerritt But the "most American" name to people outside the USA is a matter of familiarity and social perception, not statistics (or at least, that's what I was thinking in my original question). I wouldn't assume a "Michael" was from the USA, but "Chuck" sure sounds that way to me too. (Maybe because of Chuck Norris, I don't know.)
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RE: https://mastodon.social/@amenonsen/116029985914224033
So I found this to be a really interesting question, because yeah, Chuck and Brandon are “default American” names to me. And now I’m interested to know what other names people from outside the US see as default American names, and also, if there’s default names for other countries.
@astronomerritt Russ, & Chad!
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@croptopjin Oooh I heard that was a thing in Germany! They call it Kevinismus.
@astronomerritt @croptopjin I know someone who changed their name to Kevin because they had German heritage and it was pronounced sensibly in both English and German... I suspect he wasn't aware of the Kevinismus aspect tho as he doesn't live in Germany.
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@skittles I’ve heard of Kevinismus and associated names but I had no idea about Karl-Heinz and Malte and I find that absolutely fascinating!
I’ve only ever heard of two people called Genesis and they were both Filipino, but those other names you gave are ABSOLUTELY American-sounding.
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@astronomerritt Russ, & Chad!
@DrChris Russ is a good one actually, I’ve known some Russels but they’ve never been Russes!
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@piglet @astronomerritt I work with 2 men named Chad

Also a Chaz@Artemis201 @piglet You could feasibly have a British Chaz, I think! It is hilarious to me that you actually work with two Chads, I still can’t quite get my brain to recognise it as a name real people have

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@hattom @astronomerritt interesting that Kayleigh was the example here, since it was pretty high on this list of Irish girls names (though I suspect this list was written for Americans)
@Artemis201 Oh lord, Irish name lists written by/for Americans are always hilariously wrong in a few ways!
A céilidh (Scottish Gaelic) or céilí (Irish) is a WORD, not a name. It’s a social gathering.
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I was not aware that there was a shortage of Michaels in Ireland.
But when I was in college calculus here in the US, there were four other students in the class named "Michael" ...
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I was not aware that there was a shortage of Michaels in Ireland.
But when I was in college calculus here in the US, there were four other students in the class named "Michael" ...
@michael_w_busch @pthime Oh, I know many Michaels, it’s just that the USA seems to have even MORE, proportionally

There was only one in my university calculus class, for instance…
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RE: https://mastodon.social/@amenonsen/116029985914224033
So I found this to be a really interesting question, because yeah, Chuck and Brandon are “default American” names to me. And now I’m interested to know what other names people from outside the US see as default American names, and also, if there’s default names for other countries.
@astronomerritt Every piece of fiction written by an American but set in the UK or just featuring British characters seems to include at least one Simon, Nigel or possibly Ian.
I find this exceedingly odd (and funny) as most real-life British guys seem to have names like Matt or George.
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