One of the biggest cultural differences between the USA and Europe is the increasingly common use of patronyms as given names in American society, especially for boys/men. I had a look at the top 100 baby names in the USA in 2012 and found 33 boy names that were based on family names - one third of the total !
This phenomenon is less common for girl's names, but still account for nearly one in five of the 100 most popular names.
Although using patronyms as given names has been known to happen in other English speaking countries, especially among people of Celtic heritage, nowhere is this more fashionable than in the USA. The Celtic connection is obvious from the above list. About half of the surnames turned into given names are of Irish or Scottish Gaelic origin, and many of the English-sounding ones are actually more typical of Lowland Scotland and Ulster (Carson, Easton, Harrison, Hunter, Jackson), Wales (Reese), or Devon and Corwall (Cole, Colton, Wyatt).
The question is why is this happening ? What made Americans decide one day that it was okay to call one's child by a family name rather than a regular given name ? In some cultures it is very rude to address someone only by his/her surname (without being preceded of Mr/Ms). Americans also started the trend of calling most people, even in business situations, by their given name instead of saying Mr or Mrs something. This extreme informality may have been the factor that blew away the clear distinction between given names and family names.
- Jackson (2nd most popular boy name)
- Mason
- Logan
- Dylan
- Owen
- Connor
- Carter
- Landon
- Cameron
- Grayson
- Tyler
- Wyatt
- Hunter
- Colton
- Cooper
- Levi
- Parker
- Chase
- Blake
- Nolan
- Miles
- Jordan
- Carson
- Riley
- Hudson
- Cole
- Brody
- Bentley
- Ryder
- Brandon
- Easton
- Lincoln
- Harrison
This phenomenon is less common for girl's names, but still account for nearly one in five of the 100 most popular names.
- Madison (10th most popular girl name)
- Addison
- Avery
- Hailey
- Harper
- Mackenzie
- Peyton
- Riley
- Brooklyn
- Reagan
- Bailey
- Sydney
- Taylor
- Kennedy
- Kendall
- Piper
- Reese
- Quinn
Although using patronyms as given names has been known to happen in other English speaking countries, especially among people of Celtic heritage, nowhere is this more fashionable than in the USA. The Celtic connection is obvious from the above list. About half of the surnames turned into given names are of Irish or Scottish Gaelic origin, and many of the English-sounding ones are actually more typical of Lowland Scotland and Ulster (Carson, Easton, Harrison, Hunter, Jackson), Wales (Reese), or Devon and Corwall (Cole, Colton, Wyatt).
The question is why is this happening ? What made Americans decide one day that it was okay to call one's child by a family name rather than a regular given name ? In some cultures it is very rude to address someone only by his/her surname (without being preceded of Mr/Ms). Americans also started the trend of calling most people, even in business situations, by their given name instead of saying Mr or Mrs something. This extreme informality may have been the factor that blew away the clear distinction between given names and family names.