Name meme (I got it from bloodyaussie)

Jul 29, 2003 11:34


Just in case you were wondering:

Tracy is the #291 most common male name.
0.048% of men in the US are named Tracy.
Around 58800 US men are named Tracy!

Tracy is the #108 most common female name.
0.197% of females in the US are named Tracy.
Around 251175 US females are named Tracy!

Tracy is the #1082 most common last name.
0.011% of last names in the ( Read more... )

names, memes, gender

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Comments 7

boojum July 29 2003, 19:22:20 UTC
I wonder if it's related to the "woman" as adjective trend? I've fairly often seen "There are woman engineers and male engineers" and similar things.

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goteam July 29 2003, 19:34:05 UTC
All I know is, it's inconsistent and it bugs me. If they'd said, "X percent of all women in the US" or "X percent of all males in the US", that'd be okay. But the mix-and-match doesn't work for me.

The "'woman' as adjective" thing kinda bugs me, and I'm not sure why. Possibly for the same reason it's dumb to separate writers into "poets" and "poetesses" --- unless you have a very specific reason for needing to mention gender, calling Emily Dickinson a "woman poet" or "poetess" both reinforces the idea that masculine is generic, and implies that yeah, she was an okay poet... for a woman.

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boojum July 29 2003, 19:49:13 UTC
*nod* Aviatrix and so forth. I've mostly seen "woman" as an adjective in direct opposition to "male" in the same position, though. I wonder if it's a fumbled attempt at a lack of sexism: "We have woman poets and we have mustn't say 'real', what can I put here? male poets." Sort of that "woman" and "lady" have been used as (usually diminutive) adjectives, but "man" and "gentleman" haven't, so the speaker turns to ordinary English rules and pulls out the real adjective "male".

Hmm. That doesn't explain your original example, though. Any chance they were doing something bizarre, like having records for girl children but not for boy children? Or female aliens? (Our records show that Xsdjfk is the 430th most common name among Jovians....)

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coldtortuga July 29 2003, 20:25:49 UTC
That website only uses "men" in one place -- in the results returned by the search-script. On the home-page and the FAQ, "male" and "female" are used consistently.

So, why does "men" get used in one line of code of the php script?

I suggest that it's an artifact, just something that slipped through the debugging process. I doubt the author is particularly interested in the actual results, and instead spent lots of spare time tinkering just trying to get it to work. Any outputs (considering it's coded in php) would be an afterthought.

Maybe email the author and point it out as a "bug" :-)

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amoken July 29 2003, 20:23:45 UTC
Yeah that kinda tripped me up into wondering if they didn't count boys but did count girls. I wonder if they did a search and replace by eye rather than by tool and just missed "men".

There are only twice as many Thorsons as Thorsens in the US. So why the heck does everyone always try to spell it with an 'o' and get all surprised that there could possibly be an 'e' there? Must be the prominence of Johnson and such (2ish mil vs 5K Johnsens).

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