View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

[Facts] The Mary effect...
According to my rough calculations, in 1901 there were around 254,230 baby girls' births registered in the US. Of those, 13,136 or a whopping 5.167% were named Mary. Another 2% were named Helen, and the next 7 names (Anna, Margaret, Ruth, Elizabeth, Marie, Florence and Ethel) accounted for another 10.2% combined.The result of this very heavy weighting towards the top few names is that names with quite small usages, like Barbara, get pulled further up the rankings.
https://nanowrimo.org/participants/christine-seaforth-finch
http://christineseaforthfinch.blogspot.com/
vote up7vote down

Replies

I don't know why Amphelise's answer got a downvote because it is exactly to the point. The name frequency distribution in 1900 was very top heavy with thin tails, whereas the distribution nowadays has much thicker tails.
vote up3vote down
I didn't even know we HAD upvotes and downvotes on here lol.
vote up3vote down