View Message

This is a reply within a larger thread: view the whole thread

Re: How are hyphenated names counted in the popularity statistics?
My understanding for the SSA (US Social Security Administration) is that hyphens are omitted, and double names without a hyphen are recorded as first name, middle name. So Mary-Jane would be recorded as Maryjane, and Mary Jane would be just Mary. The SSA doesn't include any middle names in its popular-names listings. Informally, I have observed that double names without a hyphen are very common, more common than the hyphenated versions and often more common than the combined versions: Mary Ann, Mary Jane, Mary Lou, Ann Marie, Jo Ann, Jo Ellen, etc. These would have been counted as Mary, Ann, Jo. I think this helps explain why a name like Jo was so high on the list through the 1960s.
vote up1vote down

Replies

This is correct for the SSA, however some other national agencies do include hyphens and/or diacritics in their data.
vote up1vote down