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[Opinions] Top Names For Every Letter UK
I saw that someone did this for the USA, so I thought I’d do the UK version. Sorry if I made any mistakes A
Arthur (3) & Amelia (2)B
Benjamin (40) & Bonnie (45) C
Charlie (12) & Charlotte (20) D
Daniel (50) & Daisy (24)E
Edward (29) & Emily (15) F
Freddie (13) & Freya (12)G
George (2) & Grace (11)H
Harry (8) & Harper (28) I
Isaac (21) & Isla (3)J
Jack (10) & Jessica (37) K
Kai (103) & Khadija (182) L
Leo (6) & Lily (7)M
Muhammad (5) & Mia (5)N
Noah (4) & Nancy (66)O
Oliver (1) & Olivia (1)P
Patrick (117) & Poppy (17)Q
Quinn (308) & Quinn (248) R
Roman (28) & Rosie (9)S
Sebastian (39) & Sophia (10) T
Theodore (14) & Thea (57)U
Umar (274) & N/AV
Vinnie (119) & Violet (48) W
William (20) & Willow (12)X
Xander (200) & N/AY
Yusuf (93) & Yusra (331)Z
Zachary (56) & Zara (73)
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I like:
Zachary not Zara
William not Willow
Thea not Theodore
Roman not Rosie
Patrick and Poppy
Olivia not Oliver
Nancy not Noah
Leo and Lily
Freya not Freddie
Emily not EdwardYou can keep the rest all together.
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Seeing Xander as the top X name surprised me - turns out it's five places above Xavier (the top masculine X name in the U.S.). I'm not sure why "nicknames as first names" strikes me as odd in Great Britain... maybe it's all those historical romances / period pieces that present a more refined façade.Harry's popularity also seems dubious to me. Outside of Harry Potter, Harry is quite a dated name in the U.S. It's not even a "Dad name" anymore so much as a "Grandpa name." But in the U.K. (and I think England in particular), it's trendy!Freya is trending upward in the U.S., and I wonder if its popularity will surpass that of Faith in a couple years.Muhammad is the most popular transliteration of the name in the U.S., but we have other variants that also chart: Mohammad, Mohamed, Mohammed... Interestingly, Muhammed also charts in the U.K. (138), but not in the U.S. Yusuf is also the highest-charting Y name in the U.S., but it's much further down the popularity list. (Umar & Yusra don't even chart). Reading these stats almost makes me want to ask if the U.S. is really as "diverse" as people think, but then I notice that Uriel, Ximena, and Yaretzi from that list are all names usually used by Hispanic / Latinx families.
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Bonnie, Nancy, and Vinnie surprise me.
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