How popular is the baby name Regis in the United States right now? How popular was it historically? Use the popularity graph and data table below to find out! Plus, see all the blog posts that mention the name Regis.
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Beauty queen Du Sharme Carter, who represented Oklahoma at Miss America 1993 (held in September of 1992). Though she didn’t win the pageant, she did place 4th runner-up.
I couldn’t find a clip of Du Sharme introducing herself, but pageant co-hosts Regis Philbin and Kathie Lee Gifford consistently pronounced her first name doo-SHAYR-mee — middle syllable like the first part of Sharon.
In October, Jet magazine profiled Du Sharme and the three other African-American delegates in the pageant that year. (The most successful, Pamela McKelvy of Kansas, placed 3rd runner-up.)
It’s possible that Du Sharme Carter’s name was inspired by DuSharme hair care products, which were being advertised regularly in African-American magazines like Jet and Ebony during the early 1970s (when she was born).
What are your thoughts on the name Du Sharme?
P.S. The winner of Miss America 1993 was Leanza Cornett.
The image above, of the Boulevard du Temple in Paris, was captured in early 1838 by Louis Daguerre, inventor of the daguerreotype.
It may be the earliest surviving photograph of a person. Two people, actually. Both are in the lower left.
Here’s a close-up:
The standing man is getting his shoe shined, and the other man (partially obscured) is doing the shoe-shining.
Of all the people on the sidewalk that day, these were the only two to stay still long enough (about 10 minutes) to be captured in the image.
Now for the fun part!
What would you name these two Frenchmen?
Let’s pretend you’re writing a book set in Paris in the 1830s, and these are two of your characters. What names would you give them?
Here’s a long list of traditional French male names, to get you started:
Abel Absolon Achille Adam Adolphe Adrien Aimé Alain Alban Albert Alexandre Alfred Alphonse Amaury Amroise Amédée Anatole André Anselme Antoine Antonin Apollinaire Ariel Aristide Armand Arnaud Arsène Arthur Aubert Aubin Auguste Augustin Aurèle Aurélien Baptiste Barnabé Barthélémy Basile Bastien Benjamin Benoit Bernard Bertrand Blaise Boniface Bruno Calixte Camille Céleste Célestin Césaire César Charles Christian Christophe
Clair Claude Clément Clovis Constant Constantin Corentin Corin Corneille Cosme Cyril Damien Daniel David Denis Déodat Désiré Didier Dieudonné Dimitri Diodore Dominique Donat Donatien Edgar Edgard Edmé Edmond Édouard Élie Eloi Émeric Émile Émilien Emmanuel Enzo Éric Ermenegilde Ernest Ethan Étienne Eugène Eustache Évariste Évrard Fabien Fabrice Félicien Félix Ferdinand Fernand Fiacre Firmin Florence Florent
Florentin Florian Francis François Frédéric Gabriel Gaël Gaëtan Gaspard Gaston Gaubert Geoffroy Georges Gérard Géraud Germain Gervais Ghislain Gilbert Gilles Gratien Grégoire Guatier Guillaume Gustave Guy Hector Henri Herbert Hercule Hervé Hilaire Hippolyte Honoré Horace Hubert Hugues Humbert Hyacinthe Ignace Irénée Isidore Jacques Jason Jean Jérémie Jérôme Joachim Jocelyn Joël Jonathan Joseph Josse Josué Jourdain
Jules Julien Juste Justin Laurent Laurentin Lazare Léandre Léo Léon Léonard Léonce Léonide Léopold Lionel Loïc Lothaire Louis Loup Luc Lucas Lucien Lucrèce Ludovic Maël Marc Marcel Marcellin Marin Marius Martin Mathieu Mathis Matthias Maurice Maxence Maxime Maximilien Michaël Michel Modeste Narcisse Nathan Nathanaël Nazaire Nicéphore Nicodème Nicolas Noé Noël Norbert Odilon Olivier Onésime Pascal
Patrice Paul Philippe Pierre Placide Pons Prosper Quentin Rainier Raoul Raphaël Raymond Régis Rémy René Reynaud Richard Robert Roch Rodolphe Rodrigue Roger Roland Romain Rosaire Ruben Salomon Samuel Sébastien Séraphin Serge Sévère Séverin Simon Sylvain Sylvestre Télesphore Théodore Théophile Thibault Thierry Thomas Timothée Toussaint Urbain Valentin Valère Valéry Vespasien Victor Vincent Vivien Xavier Yves Zacharie
For some real-life inspiration, here are lists of famous 19th century and 20th century French people, courtesy of Wikipedia. Notice that many of the Frenchman have double-barreled, triple-barreled, even quadruple-barreled given names. (Daguerre himself was named Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre.)
Want a boy name that’s not popular, but also not unheard of?
I looked through all the names at the bottom of SSA’s 2011 mega-list and found a bunch of hidden gems:
Alaric (48 baby boys)
Alban (12)
Aldous (11)
Aldric (7)
Alphonse (20)
Archibald (14)
Astor (5)
Augustin (50)
Balthazar (13)
Barclay (6)
Barnabas (8)
Bartholomew (19)
Booker (22)
Chadwick (34)
Cyril (41)
Clancy (14)
Claude (44)
Clement (34)
Crispin (21)
Darcy (15)
Dirk (40)
Doyle (10)
Ernst (6)
Ferdinand (20)
Garrick (42)
Giles (20)
Gregor (14)
Griffith (18)
Grover (9)
Gustaf (7); Gustav (29)
Horatio (10)
Hubert (46)
Ignatius (49)
Isidore (7)
Kermit (6)
Lambert (6)
Laird (17)
Laurence (48)
Laurent (9)
Leander (48)
Leith (7)
Lemuel (50)
Lowell (29)
Maxfield (22)
Newton (14)
Nicanor (8)
Norbert (9)
Norris (21)
Ogden (13)
Orson (33)
Osborn (5); Osborne (7)
Oswald (18)
Pascal (25)
Percival (13)
Peregrine (9)
Piers (16)
Regis (10)
Remis (11)
Roscoe (47)
Rudolph (44)
Rufus (39)
Rupert (8)
Sanford (6)
Seymour (6)
Sherman (40)
Sinclair (8)
Tavish (16)
Thane (48)
Tobiah (14)
Walton (14)
Warner (48)
Watson (42)
Webster (8)
Weldon (27)
Werner (11)
Wilbert (42)
Wilbur (20)
Winfield (7)
Winfred (7)
Winslow (10)
York (5)
Zebulon (25)
Zeno (13)
(In some cases, a different spelling of the name is more popular than what’s shown here. For instance, Laurence is rare, but Lawrence is moderately popular.)
Looking for a set of baby names with something in common? If so, here are some 5-letter anagram names for you to check out!
Anagrams are words that contain the same set of letters, but not in the same sequence. For instance, the words “alter,” “alert,” and “later” are all anagrams of one another.
Anagram names can be a neat option for siblings — particularly multiples (like twins and triplets). They’re also a clever way to connect a baby name to the name of an older relative (e.g., grandpa Klaus, grandson Lukas).
Below are hundreds of five-letter names (collected from the SSA’s huge database of U.S. baby names) that happen to be anagrams of other names.
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