How popular is the baby name Songul 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 Songul.

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Popularity of the baby name Songul


Posts that mention the name Songul

First name data from the 2020 U.S. Census

U.S. Census 2020
U.S. Census 2020

The U.S. Census Bureau recently released data on the most common first names reported in the 2020 Census.

The full set of data, which contains 5.2 million first names, covers 302 million people (91.1% of the enumerated population). The portion of the data released to the public features more than 53,000 names — every name that belonged to at least 100 people.

Impressively, the top 25 names each belonged to more than 1 million (!) people:

  1. Michael (3.5 million)
  2. John (3.1)
  3. James (3.0)
  4. David (2.8)
  5. Robert (2.8)
  6. William (2.2)
  7. Mary (1.8)
  8. Maria (1.7)
  9. Daniel (1.6)
  10. Joseph (1.6)
  11. Richard (1.6)
  12. Thomas (1.5)
  13. Christopher (1.5)
  14. Jennifer (1.3)
  15. Matthew (1.3)
  16. Jose (1.2)
  17. Charles (1.2)
  18. Elizabeth (1.2)
  19. Patricia (1.2)
  20. Linda (1.2)
  21. Mark (1.1)
  22. Andrew (1.1)
  23. Anthony (1.1)
  24. Kevin (1.0)
  25. Brian (1.0)

Within the top 1,000, the most “predominantly male” and “predominantly female” names were Kurt and Kathleen, respectively. The name that came closest to a 50-50 split (between male and female) was Harley. And the names that had the “highest shares of identification with” particular racial/ethnic groups were…

White
(non-Hispanic)
1. Beth, 95.0% white
2. Jill, 93.7%
3. Scott, 93.2%
4. Doug, 92.8%
5. Kathleen, 92.7%
Black or African American
(non-Hispanic)
1. Tyrone, 81.7% Black
2. Willie, 79.9%
3. Reginald, 77.9%
4. Maurice, 60.0%
5. Terrance, 56.0%
Asian, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander
(non-Hispanic)
1. Mohammad, 56.9% Asian/Islander
2. Mohammed, 47.9%
3. Son, 24.7%
4. Andy, 21.0%
5. Jenny, 20.7%
American Indian and Alaska Native
(non-Hispanic)
1. Cheyenne, 3.2% Native American
2. Dakota, 2.5%
3. Vernon, 2.0%
4. Harley, 1.9%
5. Donovan, 1.8%
Two or more races
(non-Hispanic)
1. Kai, 19.5% multi-racial
2. Aaliyah, 12.3%
3. Nevaeh, 12.0%
4. Mya, 11.3%
5. Maya, 11.2%
Hispanic or Latino1. Guadalupe, 98.5% Hispanic
2. Blanca, 98.4%
3. Mayra, 97.8%
4. Yesenia, 97.8%
5. Juana, 97.3%

And what about the rest of the names?

I haven’t looked at every single one (yet!), but I did scan thousands of the rarest. I spotted…

  • Arabic names like Boutros and Taoufik,
  • Armenian names like Vartouhi and Mesrop,
  • Bosnian names like Avdo and Hatidza,
  • Brazilian names like Elenilson and Moacir,
  • Dutch names like Geert and Leendert,
  • Cambodian names like Sokhoeun and Sreymom,
  • Ethiopian names like Fikre and Tesfai,
  • Filipino names like Liwanag and Rizalito,
  • Greek names like Afroditi and Kyriacos,
  • German names like Edeltraut and Albrecht,
  • Hungarian names like Zsuzsa and Gyongyi,
  • Indian names like Nagaraja and Tarannum,
  • Italian names like Guglielmo and Pierluigi,
  • Finnish names like Pirkko and Heikki,
  • Japanese names like Hidenori and Kazuaki,
  • Korean names like Sooji and Hyeong,
  • Lithuanian names like Algimantas and Gintaras,
  • Laotian names like Khamphay and Bounpheng,
  • Persian names like Morvarid and Rouzbeh,
  • Russian names like Pyotr and Genrikh,
  • Spanish names like Salustiano and Reveriano,
  • Serbian names like Ljubisa and Djuro,
  • Thai names like Chatchai and Waraporn,
  • Tibetan names like Tseten and Phuntsok,
  • Turkish names like Songul and Nevzat, and
  • Vietnamese names like Ngoi and Ngot.

(None of the above have ever popped up in the SSA data.)

I also noticed Utahna, Quisqueya, Littlejohn, and Garibaldi.

One that I did not see, however, was Abcde — a real name has been given to hundreds of U.S. babies since the 1990s. I looked this one up specifically because the Census Bureau stated in its methodology section that it had deleted “many obvious nonnames such as ABCDEFG, ADULT FEMALE, DONT KNOW, and NO NOMBRE.” I wonder if Abcde wasn’t mistakenly omitted…?

Sources:

Image: Adapted from US Census 2020 tools of the trade by Daniel Case under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Popular and unique baby names in Austria, 2024

Flag of Austria
Flag of Austria

Last year, the European country of Austria welcomed 77,238 babies — 37,463 girls and 39,775 boys.

What were the most popular names among these babies? Emilia and Elias.

Here are Austria’s top 50 girl names and top 50 boy names of 2024:

Girl names

  1. Emilia, 534 baby girls
  2. Emma, 523
  3. Marie, 518
  4. Anna, 516
  5. Sophia, 488
  6. Mia, 462
  7. Lena, 433
  8. Valentina, 422
  9. Lea, 398
  10. Laura, 397
  11. Hannah, 395
  12. Lina, 390
  13. Sophie, 380
  14. Johanna, 370
  15. Leonie, 364
  16. Nora, 332
  17. Luisa, 328
  18. Olivia, 325
  19. Lara, 315
  20. Elena, 305
  21. Ella, 297
  22. Amelie, 278
  23. Mila, 257
  24. Antonia, 256
  25. Helena, 253
  26. Magdalena, 251
  27. Valerie, 239
  28. Lia, 228
  29. Hanna, 225
  30. Miriam, 218
  31. Livia, 211
  32. Elisa, 210
  33. Isabella, 209
  34. Sara, 201
  35. Theresa, 200
  36. Alina, 197
  37. Julia, 196
  38. Elina, 187 (tie)
  39. Paulina, 187 (tie)
  40. Ida, 183 (tie)
  41. Leni, 183 (tie)
  42. Paula, 182 (tie)
  43. Sofia, 182 (tie)
  44. Sarah, 180
  45. Klara, 174
  46. Rosa, 173
  47. Flora, 171
  48. Aurelia, 170 (3-way tie)
  49. Emily, 170 (3-way tie)
  50. Katharina, 170 (3-way tie)

Boy names

  1. Elias, 671 baby boys
  2. Paul, 659
  3. Noah, 621
  4. Jakob, 620
  5. Maximilian, 599
  6. Felix, 584
  7. Leon, 561
  8. David, 500
  9. Jonas, 499
  10. Leo, 489
  11. Lukas, 453
  12. Tobias, 430
  13. Valentin, 424
  14. Moritz, 422
  15. Matteo, 394
  16. Theo, 366
  17. Anton, 363
  18. Fabian, 351
  19. Alexander, 349
  20. Julian, 338
  21. Liam, 332
  22. Simon, 329
  23. Samuel, 321
  24. Emil, 316
  25. Luca, 304
  26. Matthias, 282
  27. Luis, 280
  28. Raphael, 272
  29. Adam, 260
  30. Florian, 259
  31. Johannes, 252
  32. Gabriel, 248 (tie)
  33. Lorenz, 248 (tie)
  34. Emilio, 247
  35. Theodor, 233
  36. Finn, 231
  37. Oskar, 224
  38. Niklas, 222
  39. Leopold, 214
  40. Oliver, 212
  41. Benjamin, 202 (tie)
  42. Jonathan, 202 (tie)
  43. Sebastian, 196
  44. Ben, 192 (tie)
  45. Fabio, 192 (tie)
  46. Michael, 190
  47. Mateo, 185
  48. Kilian, 181
  49. Luka, 180
  50. Josef, 174

According to Statistics Austria, “12.5% of all newborn girls and 14.6% of all newborn boys were given one of the 10 most popular first names” in 2024.

At the other end of the spectrum are the thousands of names that were given to a single baby each last year. Here’s a selection:

Unique girl namesUnique boy names
Aorta, Beppa, Chisimdi, Desdina, Ekklesia, Febronia, Gustava, Hibat, Ikonija, Jolongi, Krinka, Lhanzey, Mrittika, Notburga, Ofri, Pinia, Rimpy, Songül, Tsvetelina, Uerda, Vanadis, Wranga, Yangtso, ZorjanaAerzu, Benneth, Cvijetin, Daphnis, Encho, Flavio, Gervin, Hanrui, Ireneus, Jandost, Kalsang, Linneo, Menippos, Nikolozi, Osimhen, Peyami, Reie, Shkelzen, Takuto, Utku, Veton, Wenz, Yetkin, Zhihmond

I don’t think I’ve ever seen Aorta — the word for the largest artery in the human body — used as a personal name before.

Notburga was the name of a medieval Austrian saint, and Osimhen may have been inspired by Nigerian soccer player Victor Osimhen.

Finally, here’s a link to Austria’s 2023 rankings, if you’d like to compare.

Sources: First names of newborns – Statistics Austria (in German), Emilia and Elias favourite baby names in 2024 – Statistics Austria (pdf), Atlas der Vornamen – Statistics Austria, Demographic characteristics of newborns – Statistics Austria

Image: Adapted from Flag of Austria (public domain)