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    16 commenti

    1. lordnacho666 on

      Yeah pretty much all those names are represented by a football player on the national team at some point.

    2. I legit never met a single person with the supposedly most common surname in my country.

    3. Tim-oBedlam on

      Müller explains why the surname Miller is more common in the USA than in Britain; many of the Millers were German immigrants who were originally Müllers. Same with the surname Johnson, which was often Anglicized from Jonsson or Johansen, or similar.

    4. OffsetCircle1 on

      We are the Sicilians, lower your shields and surrender your ships, resistance is futile

    5. DoubleSaltedd on

      By 2050, it has become something completely different in many places, such as in Sweden and France.

    6. GarapagosJapan on

      Once again, it feels like being isolated in the far east but

      anyway,

      I’ve never heard most of these surnames before.

      You don’t hear these surnames often among actors or famous people.

      In Japan, for example, there’s always at least one Sato or Suzuki in every class, and there are thousants among prime ministers and actors. But in other countries, are surnames more varied?

      Or is it that the truly exceptional, the extraordinary and unusual individuals, are found among those with unusual surnames?

    7. Far_Lie_173 on

      I have to admit I don’t think I’ve ever met a Smith in my life

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