What are the stereotypical or super common names for your generation?
What are the stereotypical or super common names for your generation?
Plenty of Todds and Kylies for gen x
Names that end with en like Kayden, Jayden, and Hayden. Raiden was never part of it unfortunately.
28 0 Reply18 0 ReplyBe the change! Name your kid raiden :D
8 0 ReplyNowadays everyoneThe kid's peers would think you got it from Genshin Impact.(Edited - I failed to write what I meant at first)
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Apparently, looking at a government website:
Jennifer Jessica Amanda Sarah Melissa
Michael Matthew Jason Christopher Joshua
And this 100% lines up with my classmates', friends', and family members' names.
18 0 ReplyI personally know a lot of millennials named Megan (Meagan, Meghan, Megyn, et al)
18 0 ReplyYou remember my wife, Megan Duffy, maiden name Duffy, hopefully no relation.
6 0 ReplyThat line is funny by itself, but how he delivered the "hopefully no relation" part so casually made it 10x funnier.
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Emily
16 0 ReplyI know like 10 Emilys it feels like.
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Not Ada apparently. Every other Ada I meet is either 5 or 85
15 0 ReplyI only know Ada Lovlace, the first programmer. Also Ada the programming language.
13 0 ReplyMy former collegue used to work in it and named his daughter after her
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Can confirm: 80 year old names are back in fashion. Every other kid in kindergarten is an Ada, Amelia, (the rest are Bryden, Jaelynn, etc.)
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Gen x here. Lots of Jennifer and Melissa.
14 0 ReplyYep. And Tom, Bob, Rob, Bill, John and Steve.
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I'm born in '78. In Poland I had several Krzysztof in my class, in Germany Daniela and Andreas.
10 0 ReplyThere were already two, Michael last initial and Mike last initial in my English class that i had to go by last name.
10 0 ReplyMichael.... Bolton? Wow, is that your real name?
14 0 ReplyWhy should I change? He's the one who sucks.
12 0 ReplyThere was nothing wrong with it, until I was about 12 years old, when that no talent ass clown started winning Grammys...
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In my class there where two loosely related cousins with the same name and surnames; we went with name and birth year to differentiate them
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Brandon, Ryan, and Aaron for guys, Christine, Sarah, and Kat for girls. Kat gets more of a mention here because it's a short version of Kate which is a short version of Kathy which is a short version of Katherine. And when you combine those, that's like 50% of every generation.
Wait, Gen X had all the Kylies? That sounds characteristically Gen Y/Z.
8 0 ReplyProbably late Gen X. Kylie was popular in Australia but went global with Kylie Minogue in Neighbours.
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I went to school with more fucking Jennifer's and Christopher's
7 0 Reply90s baby?
3 0 Reply1980
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Guess when I was born... Went to school with James, William, Dan, John, Joseph, David, Elizabeth, Lisa, Margaret, Debbie, Carolyn, Bonnie, Susan, Karen, Michael, and Peter. Most of the Karens I knew were nice people. They don't deserve the bad rap.
6 0 ReplySometime in the last hundred years?
4 0 ReplyThose dude names are common across generations. Debbie and Lisa were popular baby names in the 50s & 60s, Margaret and Carolyn too. I'm guessing you graduated high school around 1975-1980.
3 0 ReplyEarly 80s maybe 80 or 82
2 0 Reply50s?
2 0 ReplyI'd say early gen X
2 0 ReplyGraduated high school in 1975. BTW my niece has a Camden and a Corbin. My daughter is named Chelsea.
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Lilly, Luna, Sarah, Zoe
5 0 ReplyAs a trans woman who dates t4t, this is basically 50% of their names.
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Makayla, McKenzie, McKenna, Austin, Jayden
5 0 ReplyThere were 4 or 5 Jason’s in my kindergarten class.
4 0 ReplyFrench, old millenial. Plenty of Jean-"X". What I mean is :
Jean-François Jean-Michel Jean-Luc Jean-Mathieu Jean-Marc ...
4 0 ReplyMillennial here, I've noticed a lot of Stephanies, Sams, Alexes, Chloes, and Michelles. Matthew seemed like a particularly popular one - at one point we had 3 Matthews in the same class (about 25 students), and I had 2 Matthews in my immediate friend group in college.
Edit: Rachel/Rachael was another common one, had a couple of those in my friend group at one point too
4 0 ReplyI think there were six Rachels in my year at school. And apparently if I’d been a girl, that would have been my name too…
4 0 ReplyThere were 5 or 6 Sarahs in my english class in high school.
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Luke!
3 0 ReplyBorn 1981. Daniels and Todds abound.
Lots of Kylies, and the like, along with plenty of the traditional Sarahs and the like.
3 0 ReplyI was born in 80 and idk if I've ever even met a Todd. Maybe it's a regional thing? In Connecticut it was Christopher and Jennifer.
5 0 ReplyIn NJ it was Katherine/Katie, Jennifer, Jessica, Melissa, Heather, Stephanie, and there were a fair number of Tiffanys too. Soooo many Chrises, plus Matt, Jason, Rob, Nick, Alex.
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Seems everybody I went to school with was either Matt, Mike, Shawn, Jason or Brian.
3 0 ReplyThe amount of Cody and Chris's I know is surprising. I've also met plenty of Daniels and Tonys.
3 0 ReplyWhich generation and where are you located? Cody is quite a unique name in my world.
1 0 ReplyElder Millennial, Central US. I know three Cody's personally and two by acquaintance.
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Lee Ann, Cindy, Tammy, Debbie
Steve, Mike, John, Bob
2 0 ReplySean when it should be Shawn or Shaun. Not Sea with a N
2 0 ReplyShawn or Shaun were "derived" from Sean, Irish for John. Putting it diplomatically.
8 0 ReplyEvery Sean I knew who didn’t spell it “Sean” was a total dickhead, putting it slightly less diplomatically but I’ve been drinking.
4 0 ReplyDerivative or not Sea n is WRONG. 300 years of potato eating destroyed their abilities to spoke
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Far too many of the classmates I had in high school who had kids hella early all named their kids "Jayden" if it was a boy or "Skylar" if it was a girl.
2 0 ReplyMark
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