• @[email protected]
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    37 hours ago

    When I was in school every third girl was named Jennifer and every third boy was named Christopher. Don’t really see either of those nowadays. I’m in my 40s so they’re about 15-20 years from being old people names.

    Also Karen. The internet ruined that name.

  • @son_named_bort
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    1124 hours ago

    We’re only a couple of decades away from nursing homes being full of Megans.

  • @[email protected]
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    722 hours ago

    Seems like there’s a way to analyze this in a systematic way, from social security name data. Any name that popped up as a newly popular name and fell back off within a decade or two would probably eventually become a marker of that generation.

    Gladys was popular between 1900 and 1920, and became known as an old lady name by the 80’s or 90’s.

    Karen was popular between 1945 and 1965, and is regarded a prototypical boomer name.

    The Baby Jessicas of the 80’s will be retirees in the 2050’s. Ashleys and Emilys will probably be that in the 2060’s. There will be Britneys and Emmas.

    But the methodology could probably be applied to the data in a systematic way.

  • @Usernameblankface
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    811 day ago

    The top 20 or so most common names today will be the top 20 or so old people names in the future.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 day ago

      Exactly this. The majority of super-popular names now will all be “old person” names in future.

      In turn, the “old person” names of the recently deceased generations, like ‘Florence’ and ‘Edith’ are starting to reappear and be given to children again, because with that old generation dead they are freed from the old-people stereotype and seem good again. It’s cyclical.

      Amongst all names, there are some which are conversely a lot harder to date. Names that are always being given, but never top the popularity lists. Names like Mark, Thomas, or Matthew. Harder to date people with names like these, because there’s always plenty of them.

      • snooggums
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        161 day ago

        The commonly used names from religions will always dominate top name lists for sure.

      • @olosta
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        31 day ago

        The cycle is reinforced by people giving the name of their grand parents to their kids.

    • @dingus
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      61 day ago

      Yeah but it seems like some names are always somewhat popular no matter the era. “John” and “James” for example

      • @[email protected]
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        11 day ago

        I don’t think I’ve met a John that’s been in my school’s growing up or was ever younger than me. Most of the James I’ve met have been older than me or Asian (since Asian parents often gave their kids traditional Western names to assimilate).

        • @[email protected]
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          223 hours ago

          The only James I know is old and Asian, checks out. However I know like 30 Johns of varying ages.

  • Dr. Bob
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    461 day ago

    Brayden, Brittany. Anything from Game of Thrones.

    • lemmyng
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      161 day ago

      Ayden, Brayden, Kayden, Bobayden… Can probably generalize this to “unique” spellings like Kayleygh, Kyrsrtyn, etc.

      Waiting for Ruth to be popular again. No one makes pies like Ruth.

        • classic
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          31 day ago

          Some of them might become the new normal spelling, just as with so many other names and wyrds

    • @glimse
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      51 day ago

      Brittany was big in the 80s, now not so much

    • @iamtrashman1312
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      51 day ago

      Yuuup lol I came here specifically to comment “Khaleesi”

    • Like the wind...
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      -21 day ago

      Assuming the GoT babies didn’t change their names. Imagine having a name that others yourself from everyone else and it comes from a fake culture in a fake world.

      • @Snowclone
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        131 day ago

        All name are made up. Besides this is nothing new, there’s a lot of media that inspires baby names. I have s friend who’s kids are all named after Inception characters.

  • Vanth
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    422 hours ago

    Mine. I have one of the most common girl’s name in the year of my birth. About 10% of my female high school classmates had some variant of that name. I know of one girl under 10 with that name now.

  • @AA5B
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    Karen has been a very popular name through many years. I imagine it’s dropped close to zero now.

    Ella/ellie became way over popular. My kids knew so many girls with those names, more than one in a lot of their classes. No one gives out a name that’s so common

    Isabella for dogs. There are so many Bella’s and Izzies. Maybe it’s just my family: my brother got Bella. I got a rescue named izzie and honorable mention to my other brother with Ozzie

    • @[email protected]
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      122 hours ago

      With one exception.

      Ozzie the Australian Shepherd is a great dog. He deserves to own the name as an exemplar of his breed. I’ll fight you on this.

    • @[email protected]
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      222 hours ago

      Please tell me you’ve seen the future and all the “was it an aneurism or attention-seeking that made me name my kids that” names will be retired within a generation.

  • Toes♀
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    71 day ago

    Any of the popular biblical names like John, Mark and Paul.

    • Jolteon
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      81 day ago

      I’d argue that those names are the least likely to decrease in popularity, unless Bible following religions become significantly less popular.

  • 🐋 Color 🍁 ♀
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    161 day ago

    I’m not sure if it’s very common, but Elaine. It’s my name and I love it, but I’m already seeing people who think it’s kind of an old woman’s name! 😅

      • @[email protected]
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        -41 day ago

        Anything that is popular because of media

        So pretty much every Western name ever?

        I was going to say every Western name in the last century or so, but then I realized how many names are biblical, and the Bible is a book, which is also media…