MovieChat Forums > Gone with the Wind (1940) Discussion > no man should be named Ashley

no man should be named Ashley


it's confusing

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One of my clients was named Tracy. Toughest son of a bitch you'll ever meet..

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😊

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Ashley has been predominately a male name since it first appeared. For a time, with the spelling changed to Ashleigh, it also served as a female name in Britain.

Ashley as a female name in the US didn't become common until the late 20th century. It is still also used for males, though it has become less common. At the time Margaret Mitchell wrote her book (and at the time of the action) it would have been an almost exclusively a male name.

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I stand corrected.

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No problem. Names changing genders is common, but very difficult to keep track off. It just happens to be an interest of mine.

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We aren't in the 29th century. Heck, we're not even on the 22nd. Also a good friend of mine has a male cousin named Ashley. To be fair a guy named Ashley can just go by Ash which sounds better.

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Sorry, typo. Meant 20th century. I'll edit.

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I would have figured you’d pick on Heathcliff from Wuthering Heights than Ash from GWTW.

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i was being facetious

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*Lots* of names that are *now* overwhelmingly female were overwhelmingly used for boys 100 years ago, e.g.
Alexis
Aubrey
Beverley
Dana
Gale
Hilary
Kim
Lauren
Lindsay
Michele
Reese
Shannon
Shelley
Stacy
Whitney

Other names just used to be gender-neutral but are now feminized, e.g.,
Carol (e.g., O'Connor)
Evelyn (e.g., Waugh)
Marion (e.g., Morrison - John Wayne)
Tracy (e.g., Letts)

And the encroachment continues. According to the Atlantic, in 2017, there were 205 US girls named Ezra at birth, 237 Lincoln, 137 Austin, and 107 Wyatt. They're probably gone as Boys' names by 2040 at the latest.

Interestingly there's little movement/encroachment in the opposite direction either now or in the past. Start your 'What it feels like for a girl' theories:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrZzbF_sMiQ

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