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What is your stereotypical names?
I've only just noticed the Analysis feature on the name lists. According to them, my favourite masculine names include more often than not: - English in use
- Starts with the letter A
- Ends with the letter N
- Is 6 letters longFrom this and by searching for names that fit these rules, I have found that my optimal male name (according to the analysis) is Adrien (Adrien being my preferred name out of the list that was presented to me)As for female names, - English in use
- Begins with the letter A
- Ends with the letter A
- Is 6 letters in lengthFrom this, my preferred female name is ArianaSame again, but for unisex names;- English in use
- Begins with A
- Ends with R
- Is 5 OR 6 letters in lengthFrom this, my preferred unisex name is Amber as a stretch. I prefer it as a feminine name, but I can see masculine use in it
Adrien, Ariana and AmberHow about anybody else?---"one particular boogie will move mirror massaging with stirring crepe mixture, positioning loaves while in the furnace then toting items in containers" ~ best Russian daing sites (guest, 198.144.149.xxx) (2020)Formally PrincessZ and Princess Magpie
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Oh this is cool :D mine is 48% fem, 34% english, initial letter is 11% M and 10% A, final letter is 22% A, and 26% 6 letters long, so my stereotypical name would be something like Mahala or Acacia 🤔 pretty nice!
I need to get more non-english names though XD
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Based on this: Cate or Cece, but probably Cece because Cecilia is on my list and it was my favorite for awhile.
For boys, it would be Aaron. I don’t even like that name. I tend to pick a lot of Dutch names for some reason. I’m not even Dutch.
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Hm, my list setup is good for this - I have one big list, plus lists per gender that have all the same names on them as the big list.Mine -
female : 62% English, 18% M_, 48% _a, 22% five letters, 26% six letters.
Maria, Mariah, Marcia, Marina, Medora, Merla are all on the list. Maria and Marina are some of my favorite names for sure.male : 73% English, 14% M_, 28% _n, 19% four / 22 five / 24 six / 20% seven letters.
Myron is the only M name on the list that ends in N.
It's 12% D_ initial, and I like Damon even more so I'm going to say Damon.Marina and DamonTop initial letters (fem) - M C A D E/J
Top initial letters (masc) - M D R C KQuestion for others - are there any characteristics on your aggregate ratings that are above 65% ?
Mine were: Natural, Wholesome, Refined, Strange (overall and for fem)
Classic, Wholesome, Strong, Strange, Nerdy (for masc)

This message was edited 9/16/2023, 6:53 PM

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A lot of my aggregate ratings are over 65%...less are consistently over 70%. The ones most often over 70% are Classic and Strange, then Wholesome and Refined.
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I've been updating my lists and now my boys list has two lists and girls have three (because I have too many to fit into one list). I have too many to now consider easily, but I have taken my time to shuffle my favourites into two lists of their own. Therefore these lists will be different from the ones I began this with. So, according to my narrowed down lists;Female: Natural, Wholesome, Refined, Strange (Classic, Formal, Upper Class, Serious and Nerdy only just not making it to 65%)
Male: Classic, Wholesome, Strong, Strange, Nerdy (Formal, Upper Class, Refined and Serious only just not making it to 65%)The rough balances I have are Simple & Complex, Mature & Youthful for both male & female, Urban & Natural for boys and Strong & Delicate for girlsFemale sample size is 465 and Male sample size is 381Unisex sample size is only 80 and not shortened to just my favourites, but here it is anyway;Wholesome, Strong, Strange (Natural and Refined only just not making it to 65%). The balances are Classic & Modern on exactly 50/50, Formal & Informal, Upper Class & Common, Serious & Comedic and Nerdy & Unintellectual) -Also this is where I report that my initial stereotypical names I posted remain the exact same. I thought it'd be different after sifting out all other stuff, but nahGoing by the United States data (I'd use England and Wales if it went far back enough - alas), my preferences for Unisex names peak in the 1990s - 2010s, my preferences for girls peak in the 1980s and boys in the 1880s! -Also I will eventually have smaller sample sizes because I'm whittling those favourites down much further to the "I will use IRL" lists, but that'll take more time lol

This message was edited 9/17/2023, 5:56 PM

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Boy names: Usage:English Followed by Biblical, German, Dutch & French.
Initial letter: A Followed by D, L, S & C
Final letter:N followed by S, R, E & O
Length: 5 followed by 6, 4 & 7
94% Main collection, 6% User-submitted. Girl names: Usage: English Followed by Italian, German, Dutch & Swedish
Initial letter:A followed by E, L, M & S
Final letter:A followed by E, N, H & I
Length: 5&6, Tie followed by 7 & 4
91% Main collection, 9% User-submitted.
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According to the analysis of my PNL,My favorite female names most of the time include:
- French usage
- E as a first letter
- E as a last letter
- 6 to 8 lettersAccording to these information, the ideal feminine names for me would be Eléonore, Élodie, Eugénie, Eulalie, ÉvelyneAs for boys, my favorite masculine names most of the time include:
- French usage
- Starting with the letters A or E
- Finishing either with the letters D, N or S
- 6 or 7 lettersFollowing these information, the ideal masculine name for me would be: Adrien, Alexis, Arnaud, Edmond, Édouard
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For boys, my stereotypical name would be a 5-letter English name starting with R and ending with N. List example is Rowan.For girls, my stereotypical name would be a 4-letter English name starting and ending with A. List example is Asha.
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Cool!Feminine:
- English
- beginning with E or M
- ending in A
- six letters
It gives me 5 names but only one E name has English in its description: Emilia. Love it.
Masculine:
- English
- beginning with M
- ending in N
- six letters And... I don't have any on my list. So, I searched outside of my PNL. And I got Martin, Maxton, etc.😒
I don't think I'm thrilled with both of them.
Unisex:
- English
- beginning with C,E,V
- ending in N
- six letters And the name is Vivian. It's ok, but I prefer it as feminine, though.So, Emilia, Martin & VivianIndeed, it was a fun idea!
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What a fun idea!
For masculine names, they are most often:
- English
- begins with E
- ends in O
- five letters
There was only one result when I searched for this: Endro, from the user submitted names. I’ve never heard it before, but I quite like it (not a favourite, but cool nonetheless). For feminine names, they are most often:
- English
- beginning with L or S
- ending in A
- six letters long
From the options presented to me, I like Lillia, Selina, Silvia, Stella and Sylvia :)Finally for gender neutral names, they are most often:
- English
- beginning with R
- ending with A
- three letters long
There actually weren’t any results for this, not even from the user submitted names! I decided to delete the ‘English’ category just to see what I got, and I ended up with Rea, Rua and Rya from the user submitted names. So:
Endro
Lillia, Selina, Silvia, Stella and Sylvia
Rea, Rua and RyaThis was fun!
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It's hard to say because I have 15 lists, all old and long, and partially divided by language. One thing I notice is that the aggregate "impressions" is the same for ALL of them.Classic
Mature
Formal
Upper Class
Natural
Wholesome
Strong
Refined
Strange
Complex
Serious
Nerdy Common: English or German, 6 or 7 lettersI can't search for all the impressions at once, but these are some that fit...Feminine:
Athena, Augusta, Geneva, Ingrid, Ursula, Beatrix, Sibylla, AnselmaUnisex: Bronte, Azariah - then Wallis, Wisdom, Linden are only one or two impressions off.Masculine:
Tobias, Elijah, Raphael, Isaiah, Gustave, Patrick, Wendell, Abraham I do think Athena, Bronte, Tobias and Geneva, Wisdom, Raphael and Beatrix, Wallis, Wendell look like fun sibsets.ETA: I also had A names score high commonly, so if I stick with those for a sibset, Abraham, Azariah, Augusta fit - not my favorite names IRL, but I can see how they're my style.

This message was edited 9/15/2023, 8:51 PM

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I never noticed this either. For a girl, Alaina and for a boy, Aidan.
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It's funny, on my IRL list the most popular last letters in order spell Ansel. IRL: Feminine, English, A___A or A___N (tied), 5 letters long
Alana, Anaya, Audra, Astra, Alaia, Azura, Adria, Alora, Amaya, Aspen, Arden Girls: English, A___A, 6 letters
Acacia, Alanna, Allana, Alesia, Aletha, Anissa, Anneka, Annika, Annora, Ariana, Athena, Aviana, Aurora Boys: English, A___N, 5 letters
Aiden, Alban, Alden, Allan, Anton, Arren, Auden
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Looking at the other responses so far, everyone here likes A names
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Hey that's neat! Gosh, it makes me wish I had taken the name list thing seriously. It's full of my fad names and things I found interesting for a few weeks and then forgot about. I also have the maximum number of lists, it's all over the place.I have a list of the names my husband likes, and according to the analysis they like:English names
Starting AND ending with letter A
6 letters longSo stuff like Agatha, Azalea, Athena, Amelia.
Yeah that checks out!
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Fascinating!My masculine names:
• English
• Start with A
• End with S
• 6 or 7 letters long...which would leave me with Aldous or Alexis, neither of which I like.Feminine names:
• English
• Start with A
• End with A
• 6 or 7 letters long...which gives me many options. My favourite is Annora.

This message was edited 9/15/2023, 1:05 PM

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