Gender Classification
Names on WorldNames.info are classified as Male, Female, or Unisex based on government birth registration data from multiple countries.
How it works
Each name's gender is determined by a majority vote across all countries where it appears:
- If more than 70% of country registrations are male, the name is classified as Male
- If more than 70% of country registrations are female, the name is classified as Female
- If the split is between 30% and 70%, the name is classified as Unisex
Example
Adam is registered as male in 5 out of 7 country records (71%), so it is classified as Male.
Ali is registered as male in 5 out of 8 records (63%), so it is classified as Unisex.
Why some names may seem unexpected
Gender associations for names vary across cultures. A name that is exclusively male in one country may be used for both genders in another. Our classification reflects the aggregate data across all countries in our database.
Classification is based on government birth registration data. See Data Sources for details.
Origin: English
From Middle English sunne, from Old English sunna, sunne (“sun; the Sun”), from Proto-West Germanic *sunnā, from Proto-Germanic *sunnǭ, from the heteroclitic inanimate Proto-Indo-European *sh₂wén-, oblique form of *sóh₂wl̥ (“sun; the Sun”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian Sunne, West Frisian sinne, Dutch zon, Old Dutch sunna, German Low German Sünn, Old Saxon sunna, German Sonne, Old High German sunna, Faroese sunna, Icelandic sunna, Gothic 𐍃𐌿𐌽𐌽𐍉 (sunnō). More at sun.
Etymology: Wiktionary (CC-BY-SA)