How common are these stereotypical names in their countries?

>Ireland: Seamus, Patrick, Paddy, Liam, Moira
>England: Nigel, Ian, Oliver, Wilbur, Percy
>Scotland: Angus, Duncan
>Spain + Latin America: Jesus, Francisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Antonio, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Raul, Ignacio, Sebastian, Felipe, Santiago, Maria, Ana, Silvia, Sofia, Valeria, Guadalupe
>France: Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Marcel, Charles, Louis, Antoine, Julien, Francois
>Germany: Siegfried, Reinhardt, Johann(es), Wilhelm, Otto, Karl, Hans, Manfred, Helmut, Ludwig, 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, Anders
>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Vladimir, Mikhail, Alexey, Natalya, Svetlana, Olga, Anastasia
>Turkey: Mehmet
>Middle-East: Mohammad, Abdullah, Ahmed
>Israel: Shlomo, David, Daniel, Benjamin, Isaac, Mordecai, Moshe, Rebecca, Rachel
>Japan: Akira, Yoko, Things that start with Hiro

Attached: Average French People.png (870x443, 577K)

virtually non-existent, sad memes created by foolish romantics

>Sven, Lars, Ragnar, Magnus, Bjorn, Gustav, Anders
All very common. Sven and Ragnar are more common among boomers.

what are the most common names in Sudan, doc? Mohammed, then?

>mohamed
>obeid
>ahmed
>ali
>hassan
>omer
etc. basically names of the Prophet and his companions

How are you doing this fine evening?

>Pierre, Charles, Louis, Antoine, Julien
All seem rather common for my generation, otherwise its older people names usually.

>>England:
> Nigel
common , but a bit of a boomer name
>Ian
same as above
>Oliver,
Used to be considered a boomer name but seems to be making a comeback with zoomers

>Wilbur, Percy
sounds out of a victorian novell, never met anyone irl with this name.

Most common name i have encountered i would say are Charlie with younger people and Robert with older people

>Jean, Pierre, Louis, Julien, Francois
common
>Jacques, Marcel, Charles, Antoine
uncommon unless you're a boomer

Unfortunately, Charles and Robert are normal names even in the United States, so they aren't stereotypical enough.

>>Spain + Latin America
I personally know people with all these names except Sebastian, Felipe, Santiago and Valeria.

Not sure about the UK but my name is Nigel and I can tell you it's extremely rare in Canada

>>Russia: Sergei, Ivan, Dmitri, Boris, Vladimir, Mikhail, Alexey, Natalya, Svetlana, Olga, Anastasia
Pretty much common, especially Ivan and Ilya.

Sergei-fairly common
Ivan-pretty rare
Dmitri-same as sergei
Boris-rare as fuck
Vladimir-same as sergei and dmitri
Mikhail-uncommom
Alexey-less common than dmitri,vladimir and sergei

Is Sergei pronounced as Sir-gay or Ser-jay?

>Seamus
Mildly popular
>Patrick/Paddy
Quite popular, Paddy is a nickname for Patrick, not an actual name
>Liam
Also quite popular
>Moira
Never met one

>schlomo, Rebecca, Rachel, moshe, mordecai

name for old folks (boomers) rarely used nowdays.
The rest is pretty common

>Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Marcel, Charles, Louis, Antoine, Julien, Francois
Here's this year's top ten male baby names:
>Gabriel, Louis, Raphaël, Leo, Lucas, Jules, Adam, Arthur, Nathan, Hugo
Louis has a lot of prestige in France, so it's very common. This also applied to Charles some 40 years ago, but it has fallen out of grace in recent times. Marcel and Jacques feel very dated. François, Julien and Antoine are common; same for Jean and Pierre to a lesser extent.

Seergay

Rebecca is rare? Because I've known young Rebeccas here.

Never met a wilbur, nigel or percy

Thanks.
Weird how those common baby names would not be rare in the United States except for Hugo.

It's probably different in America
In hebrew rebbeca is pronounced rivka, pretty rare its more common among boomers

>Jesus, Francisco, Rodrigo, Javier, Antonio, Alfonso, Alberto, Fernando, Alejandro, Juan, Enrique, Jorge, Luis, Jose, Esteban, Pedro, Manuel, Carlos, Raul, Ignacio, Sebastian, Felipe, Santiago, Maria, Ana, Silvia, Sofia, Valeria, Guadalupe
All of these are common.

>Johann(es), Franziska
Extremely common
>Wilhelm, Ludwig, Karl
Somewhat common
>the rest
RARE

Oh jeez you're bringing back memories. In high school I knew a Rebecca whose dad called her Rivka and I never knew why, I guess he was Israeli.

>josh
>ja(y)den
>(any letter)-ayden
>darren
>darryl
>susan
>ryan
>lachlan
>courtney
>aleshia/aleesha/alysha/alisha/aleisha etc.

Is the name israel common in israel?

Not very common

Apart from lachlan and darryl these names are common with london born blacks

Is that supposed to be America or Australia?

>France: Jean, Jacques, Pierre, Marcel, Charles, Louis, Antoine, Julien, Francois

Jean, Jacques and Marcel are old people names.
Charles,Antoine,Julien,Louis and Francois are common names for middle class to upper middle class people (I've got friends with those names),

louis, antoine, julien, pierre. Didn't see many Charles desu. Also had lots of Arthur, Henri, a couple François and Grégoire.

In Québec, it's all double barelled names: Marc-Antoine, Jean-Philippe, Pierre-loup, Jean-Luc, etc.

>Nigel, Ian, Percy
boomer names.
>Wilbur
never heard before
>Oliver
very common. usually called ollie or olly.

some more common ones would be
>daniel (dan, danny), ryan, connor, samuel (sam), lewis(lew), sean/shaun, harry, jonathan(jon), charlie, aaron, james (jamie), robert (rob, robby)

australia lmao, but it could apply to america too probably