Male Names That Might Become Female Soon

Inspired by this thread:

Names
I got to thinking about this last night when I couldn’t sleep. Here are some traditionally male names that I think may become female in the next few years. This is complete speculation and without any scientific basis whatsoever. Feel free to jump in.

Sean
Dean
Toby
Owen–it just sounds like it could pink somehow to me.
Rory
Clark
Justin (perhaps spelled Justyn)
Can anyone think of some others?
I meant to add in the other thread that I know a young female Madison, Devon, Dylan and Kendall.

I could see “Ryan” making the leap.

I already know a woman named Dean.

I already know women my age (late 20s) named “Ryan”, although it is still usually considered a masculine name.

“Tristan” seems to have largely made the jump already. I know exactly one 20-something man named Tristan, and know or know of at least four female Tristans.

Evan
Ethan

Keaton
Riley

Dylan
Cade
Corey
Gene

Honestly, except for Riley and Dylan, I can’t see any of these names ever becoming girls names. And even then, both Riley and Dylan will likely be popular for both genders for a very long time.

Justine is already a feminine name.

Oooh…time for me to fess up to a certain geeky project I have going on. Over the past couple years, I’ve intermittently worked on entering the frequency of most popular baby names collected by the SSA into one massive Excel spreadsheet.

I skip around from year to year but have all of 2004-2008 logeed, so I can tell you that the following typical boys’ names are crossing over to girls’ names:

Alex (by itself rather than as a diminutive)
Charlie (beginning a steady rise, from 951 in 2005 to 736 in 2008)
Dylan (made a huge leap from 705 in 2007 to 532 in 2008, so will probably drop off again in a year or so)
Micah (recently peaked and is now dropping off)
Parker
Phoenix (in 2008, it was 401 for boys and 708 for girls; climbing for both genders)
Rowan (similar to Phoenix in terms of being gender neutral)
Ryan (appears to have peaked in 2007 since it was in the 400 range for a few years and dropped to 534 in 08)
I’ll stop here since I’m starting to realize how weird I am.

I knew a female Spencer, born in the '90’s. I always expected that name to become more common in the US, courtesy of Diana, but it doesn’t seem to have happened.

I know children (girls) named Riley, Dylan, Cody, one older adult woman named Gene, and Corey.
Hmmmm… Didn’t know about Dean, but I’m glad my “prediction” came true!

I’ll throw in Carson as well. I know one boy named Karson (gah), but I bet it goes gender neutral and then feminine in a few years.

My first name. More commonly seen in the west with the Italian spelling, which dense English speakers and others transmogrified into the feminine.

My life has consisted of an endless stream of gender confusions and ID skepticism ( by others, not so much me :wink: ).

I went to elementary school with a female Rory.

There have been female Rorys for a long time. Errol Flynn, the movie actor, had a daughter named Rory who was one of Carl and Vito’s dancing “Harlequins”. This would have been around 1966 or so, and she was presumably old enough to get into the Whisky-A-Go-Go. The Harlequins were an informal group of ten or twenty people who would show up at the clubs where the popular bands were playing, and eventually the club owners started letting them in free, because they brought the paying audiences with them.

The only Phoenix I’ve ever known is female - I also know a female Gryphon.

I also know a female Ryan, though she spells it “Rian” and it’s short for “Rhiannon”

There was a female Ryan in my math class in high school, I’m not too sure how she spelled it, though.

Robert Kennedy’s youngest daughter (born six months after his death in December 1968) is named Rory.

(Mama) Cass Elliot’s daughter, who was also born in the late 1960s, is named Owen.

Bet she was named for Gene Tierney. I like the G spelling for that name. The J spelling sounds like some Midwestern Blah housewife like Jean Teasdale.

I wonder if there’s been a noticeable upswing in numbers post-Gilmore Girls?