TIL: Today I Learned

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We are legion. :scan:

Actually the Michael's are legion. FFS every 3rd coworker I have is named Michael.
 
I usually say my name is David in public or in professional settings. People are incapable of spelling "Davy" it seems like, especially here in Vancouver where there's a street spelled Davie. I've also received a few phone calls from people who pronounce it like "Davv-eee" which is just nonsense.

In just about all my personal relationships I stick with Davy.

I've never met another person IRL with the same spelling. All I've got going for me here are Crockett and Jones. :mad:
If memory serves, there's a character in a couple of the Anne of Green Gables novels with that name.
 
Actually the Michael's are legion. FFS every 3rd coworker I have is named Michael.

In my experience, way too many people are called John. Two of my close friends are called John and it gets worse from there!
 
We are legion. :scan:

Actually the Michael's are legion. FFS every 3rd coworker I have is named Michael.
My real first name is a pretty common one, and definitely so in my generation and the one after. One year when I was working in musical theatre, there were FIVE of us with that name - the stage manager, one of her crew, two of the dancers, and me. It got so confusing that when the director yelled out, "_______!" and got five people answering her, some other way had to be found.

So the director started calling me by the name of the crew I was running: "Props!"
 
Note the "with local variants." Add 'John' and 'Juan' and you should be handily in the top three.

Going really through the list on that linked site is a lot of work
But just glancing through it shows that John and local variant are not that high aggregated.

perhaps that site is not representative enough
but it does list 150,000 names in all, and shows all countries.
 
John probably has the most cognates of any given name - Jean, Juan, Johann, Ioan, Ieuen, Ewan, Ioannes, Giovanni...
 
That one too, of course. :)
 
Ian/Iain. Or the original, Yonatan.
 
Yes, it does. The assumption is still open to challenge, but the logic holds.

Spoiler :
Actually, it doesn't, because the assumption that is needed for it to hold is "all feathers are found on birds", rather than "all birds have feathers." However, a rebuttal to the arrogantly unsupported statement from Mr Rinse and Spit was called for.

So you rebut him by admitting he was right inside spoiler tags? Interesting tactic.
 
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