Question for Germans: are all these old Germanic names such as Arnulf, Manfred, Alfred any popular nowadays...

Question for Germans: are all these old Germanic names such as Arnulf, Manfred, Alfred any popular nowadays? Have they fallen out of fashion?

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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_(given_name)
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You'll get bullied if you have a name like that. Only people over 50/60 have names like that.

What about Adolf?

German names nowadays are Ahmed, Alibak and Wladimir

No, but Boris is very popular in Germany

Nah not really

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why all those different name spellings?

german autism is why

Here are where the most Common arabic/turkish names rank

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Depends
Some are still acceptable
I hear Otto is on the rise again lel

and not a single Germanic name...

Technically, Louis has a Germanic root, it's the Frenchified version of Ludwig. But yeah, everyone has soy names these days, in Austria it's probably even worse in some aspects. What's less common here is really trashy names like Justin-Jeremy or whatever.

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Maximilian and Alexander are name kino (albeit unfortunately not germanic) the rest is crap though

>Fynn

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Emma is germanic
Louis is a frenchified germanic name.

I guess the bible names and such are bit too popular, but it doesn't seem that bad.
What do Lithuanian names usually come from?

>1.Valentina
Based little bro

Fynn-Sören
Fitje-Jonas
Anna-Lena
Laura-Sophie

YIKES

>Luisa
It's strange to see this name being so popular in Germany. It's such a latin name.

>Emma is germanic
Emma is heeb and means "Mama".

Most popular newborn children names in Lithuania (2018):

>males: Lukas, Nojus (Noah), Kajus (Kai), Jonas, Dominykas, Joris (Lithuanian one), Benas, Domas (short for Dominykas or Domantas, a Lithuanian name)

>female: Lėja (Leah), Liepa (Lithuanian one), Gabija (Lithuanian), Amelija, Luknė (Lithuanian), Patricija, Ema, Kamilė (Camila), Sofija

>Liepa
Naming a child a fucking tree

Thats just a coincidence in this case.
>en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_(given_name)
> It is derived from the Germanic word ermen meaning whole or universal

>It's strange to see this name being so popular in Germany. It's such a latin name

>Her legacy became cemented after her extraordinary 1807 meeting with French Emperor Napoleon I at Tilsit – she met with the emperor to plead unsuccessfully for favorable terms after Prussia's disastrous losses in the Napoleonic Wars. She was already well loved by her subjects, but her meeting with Napoleon led Louise to become revered as "the soul of national virtue".

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Oh, we have some more of those: Eglė (Spruce), Ąžuolas (Oak). Guess it shows we're still pagans at heart.

>Ąžuolas
Isn't that eagle?

Eagle = Erelis

>Question for Germans: are all these old Germanic names such as Arnulf, Manfred, Alfred any popular nowadays?

Total opposite. Totally out of fashion. If you find people with these names call Guiness world records because you've just found the oldest people alive.

shitty names

Ok, I just checked it in google translate, it sounded similar to Polish eagle (orzeł) (prounounced ozhew)

Also fun fact Spruce in English came from Polish Z Prus meaning "from Prussia"