Mohammed is now the most popular name for baby boys ahead of Jack and Harry Read mor

B00Mer

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Mohammed has become the most popular name for newborn boys in Britain.

It shot up from third the previous year, overtaking Jack, which had topped the list for the past 14 years but was relegated to third spot.

Olivia topped the list for little girls for the second year in a row, behind Ruby and Chloe.

A total of 7,549 newborns were given 12 variations of the Islamic prophet Mohammed’s name last year, such as Muhammad and Mohammad.

The second most popular boy’s name, Oliver, was given to 7,364 babies.

Harry and Alfie came in fourth and fifth place respectively.

The official list, which covers all births in 2009 in England and Wales, has *Mohammed at number 16 but this does not include the many different spellings, which are all ranked separately.

When they are added in, Mohammed zooms all the way up to top spot for the first time.

In order of popularity, the variant *spellings used during the year were: Muhammad, Mohammad, Muhammed, Mohamed, Mohamad, Muhamed, Mohammod, Mahamed, Muhamad, Mahammed and Mohmmed.

There are still other possible spellings but these were not used for births in England and Wales in 2009. Regionally, the single spelling of Mohammed came top of the list for the West Midlands.



Since 1999 the number of babies called Mohammed, however spelled, has increased by more than half.

In 1999 the name was given to 4,579 newborns.

Going even further back, the single spelling Mohammed appeared at 73 in the list in 1964 and 87th in 1944.

Some names appeared to have been given a popularity boost by celebrity association.

There were 282 boys called Brooklyn, 78 called Romeo and 73 called Cruz – sharing their names with the sons of David and Victoria Beckham.

The top 100 names lists include six new entries for boys: Aiden, Arthur, Frederick, Jude, Stanley and Austin.

The girls’ list had just three new entries: Heidi, Mya and Sara.

Big risers were Lucas, up 19 places since 2008 to 17th in the boys list. Archie climbed 11 places to 20 while Noah jumped 13 places to 32.

For girls, Maisie is increasingly popular, up 29 places to 34.

However, Emma, which not long ago was among the nation’s favourite names, dropped ten places to become the 41st most common name given to girls.

The figures also revealed the continued resurgence of names popular in the early 20th Century. Evie was the tenth most popular girls name last year, up 157 places since 1999.

Ruby has seen a similar rise in popularity – it was not even in the top 100 in the late 1990s. Its return has been linked to the hit song of the same name by the Kaiser Chiefs and Charlotte Church choosing it for her daughter in 2007.

Overall, the popularity of the most common names has changed little, with the top tens for both boys and girls remaining almost identical.

There were 706,248 children born in England and Wales last year.

Read more: Mohammed is now the most popular name for baby boys ahead of Jack and Harry | Mail Online

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Corduroy

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This sort of thing is often presented as a canary-like warning for xenophobic hysteria. "Mohammad is the most popular name. It's the end of White Christian civilization!!!" But the Muslim population of the UK is under 3%. So what does the popularity of the name Mohammad mean exactly? Does it mean that the UK is on the fast track to becoming an Islamic Republic? Seems that the only logical explanation for this is that Muslim families are exceptionally uncreative when it comes to naming boys and there are enough Muslims in the country to make this statistically significant. The name is really really popular among the few Muslim families in the UK. Girl Muslim names you will notice don't even break the top ten.
 

B00Mer

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Corduroy

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Actually, I pulled it off a bookshelf I have at work. We have lots of demographic reference around here. My number is the official census number, but it's probably increased since that last census. I myself was surprised it was so low. I thought it was around 5%, and I still would have made the same point if it was. Hell, I'll give you 10% and my point would still stand.
 

B00Mer

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Actually, I pulled it off a bookshelf I have at work. We have lots of demographic reference around here. My number is the official census number, but it's probably increased since that last census. I myself was surprised it was so low. I thought it was around 5%, and I still would have made the same point if it was. Hell, I'll give you 10% and my point would still stand.

Yeah but the problem is they don't assimilate into British Society, they create ghettos that the local police are afraid to drive in.

Sorta like rats in a nest.
 

Machjo

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Yeah but the problem is they don't assimilate into British Society, they create ghettos that the local police are afraid to drive in.

Sorta like rats in a nest.

Yeah. I hate that word, "assimilation"? We tried that with the residential school system. It worked to a degree, though still immoral, and look at the damage it's caused for generations to come. Assimilation never works without leaving a trail of debris behind.
 

Corduroy

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just replying to your off topic reply.. ;)

Off topic reply? You started a topic about Mohammad being the most popular name in the UK. I replied trying to analyzing the cause and the meaning of your topic: i.e. that it means with so few Muslims in the UK, Mohammad must be a very popular boys' name among Muslims.

So tell me, how is "Mohammad must be a very popular boy's name" off topic from "Mohammad is now the most people boy's name in the UK."?

Ugh, I've only been back on this forum for a day and the stupidity is already getting to me.
 

B00Mer

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Yeah but the problem is they don't assimilate into British Society, they create ghettos that the local police are afraid to drive in.

Sorta like rats in a nest.

Why are you defecting away from that reply.. no argument to counter my claim that Muslims are just becoming ghetto rats, and police are afraid to go into the neighborhoods??

[youtube]PH4_OwxLiXU[/youtube]

It's not just a UK problem, it's a European problem.
 

Corduroy

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Why are you defecting away from that reply.. no argument to counter my claim that Muslims are just becoming ghetto rats, and police are afraid to go into the neighborhoods??

I don't believe that human beings can turn into rats. Now, I remember in Cinderella mice turning into humans through the magic of the Fairy Godmother, but that movie was fiction. But if Muslims were turning into rats, I'm not surprised the police are afraid. If people were turning into rats in my neighborhood, I'd get the **** out of there. Of course, rats in general creep me out.
 

Corduroy

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Living like ghetto rats is an analogy - dumb ass.. fugure you would take it literally .. geez

Breeding like rabbits, a dpgs life, hungry as a bear
.

Oh I got that. I was making fun of you, see. The question that needs to be answered first though is why should I take you seriously?