It probably comes as no surprise that the most common ending letters are A for girls and N for boys, with about 34% of girls and 32% of boys last year (and if you add in the -ah names for girls, that jumps to nearly 40%).
Starting letter
|
Ending letter
|
Girls
|
|
A, 16.6%
|
A, 33.6%
|
M, 8.2%
|
E, 16.7%
|
E, 7.7%
|
N, 11.4%
|
S, 6.7%
|
Y, 10.5%
|
L, 6.1%
|
H, 6.4%
|
Boys
|
|
J, 12.6%
|
N, 32%
|
A, 9.5%
|
R, 8.8%
|
C, 7.4%
|
S, 6.6%
|
M, 6.8%
|
L, 6.2%
|
L, 6.2%
|
E, 6.2%
|
Now, you'd probably think that the distributions are proportional--that is, if you look at both starting and ending letters, the most common patterns for girls would be A____a, followed by A____e, then M_____a, then A___n, and so on, but that isn't quite how it works out. In fact, the 10 most common patterns for each gender are:
Girls
|
Boys
|
A___a
|
J___n
|
M___a
|
A___n
|
S___a
|
C___n
|
E___a
|
B___n
|
C___e
|
K___n
|
L___a
|
D___n
|
A___n
|
C___r
|
A___e
|
L___n
|
A___y
|
E___n
|
M___e
|
J___h
|
These 10 constructions account for about 30% of all girls born in 2016, and 25% of boys.
C___e at the girls #5 seems a bit random (C is the 7th most common starting letter for girls), but quite a few of our most common __e names start with C (Charlotte, Chloe, Claire, Caroline). Similarly, J___h ranking at boys' #10 (H is the 6th most common ending letter for boys) is due nearly exclusively to Biblical boys' names like Joseph, Josiah, Jeremiah, & Jonah.
The absence of M___n names is odd--but after Mason at #4 on the charts, you have to go all the way down to #256 to find Martin, and then Maximilian at #432.
Also, while E is the 5th most common ending letter for boys, most of those are one-syllable names, which leads to them being much more varied bunch. J___e was the 11th most common boys' name pattern, due largely to the variant spellings of Jace, as well as Spanish names like Jose & Jorge.
Now let's shift a bit to first/second letter combinations. The Top 10 patterns last year were:
Now let's shift a bit to first/second letter combinations. The Top 10 patterns last year were:
Girls
|
Boys
|
Combined
|
Ma___
|
Ja___
|
Ma___
|
Al___
|
Ma___
|
Ja___
|
El___
|
Jo___
|
Ca___
|
Ka___
|
Ca___
|
Jo___
|
Em___
|
Br___
|
Al___
|
Ha___
|
Da___
|
El___
|
An___
|
Ka___
|
Ka___
|
Sa___
|
Co___
|
Br___
|
Ca___
|
An___
|
An___
|
Ad___
|
Ch___
|
Ch___
|
=27% of girls
|
=30% of boys
|
=54% of all babies
|
I'm surprised Ad___ only barely makes the Top 10, but aside from Addison and the dozens of spellings of Adeline, there really aren't that many other Ad-names (Adriana is the next most common, and it's not even in the Top 200). Sa___ also surprised me, but while they aren't "exciting", Sarah, Savannah, and Samantha are still fairly common.
The profusion of these top patterns seems to be due to them being a mixture of modern & classic names. For Ja___ we have Jayden & Jace, but we also have James and Jacob. Mason and Maddox, as well as Matthew and Max. Carly and Cadence; Caroline and Catherine.
And if you wish to see the entire, and probably confusing, charts of name patterns, you can find them here.
I did also try to combine the two above datasets, and sadly, the results were not nearly as interesting, IMO. Here are the top 10 patterns of first/second/last letters:
Girls
|
Boys
|
Al___a
|
Ja___n
|
Mi___a
|
Br___n
|
So___a
|
Ca___n
|
El___a
|
Jo___n
|
Ma___a
|
Ka___n
|
Em___a
|
Ma___n
|
Ar___a
|
Jo___h
|
Ma___n
|
No___h
|
Am___a
|
Mi___l
|
Ma___e
|
Lu___s
|
In total, those patterns account for about 13% each of girls and boys born last year. Some of the patterns are more diverse: Ja___n is easily the most common (about 3% of boys) with all the various spellings of Jackson, Jayden, Jason, Jaxton, etc; while Al___a (about 2% of girls) is thanks to Alexa, Alana, Alina, Alexandra and so on.
However, many are the result of only one or two names--So___a is mostly Sophia; No___h almost entirely Noah. Mi___l is literally only Michael and its international variants.
I am curious how data from a couple generations ago would stack up, though. We're using a much wider variety of names from wider variety of cultures than we used to. :)