Author

Ivy Hung
Data Journalist
Based in Arizona, USA
Ivy is a data journalist based in Arizona, United States. A business school graduate now working her way into tech, she spent her early career in product marketing, project management, and marketing strategy — roles where reading a name the same way you read a brand became second nature.
She joined NamesPop because the name datasets sit at exactly the intersection she cares about: consumer behaviour, cultural identity, and what numbers tell us about decisions families make quietly, one at a time. Her writing leans on SSA and municipal pet registries the way a marketer reads a segmentation report — looking for the audiences hiding inside the aggregate.
Cross-cultural naming is her main beat, with a particular interest in how Hispanic, Asian-American, and bicultural families navigate the tension between heritage and assimilation in the American Southwest.
2,409
Total pieces
140
Articles
1,119
Baby commentary
1,150
Pet commentary
Ivy Hung's contributions
- Pet commentary
Brandie
Brandie is an alternate spelling of Brandy — the spirit name turned given name that peaked in American usage in the 1970s–1980s, carried by the Looking Glass hit "Brandy (You're a…
- Pet commentary
Brooklynn
Brooklynn with the double-N is the stylized spelling of Brooklyn — the New York City borough, itself from the Dutch Breukelen — and on a pet it functions exactly as it does as a h…
- Pet commentary
Chika
Chika works in several traditions simultaneously: it's a West African name (particularly Igbo) meaning "God is greatest," a Japanese name meaning "scattered flowers" or "wisdom,"…
- Pet commentary
Dan
Dan is the shortest form of Daniel — Hebrew for "God is my judge" — and one of those names so thoroughly casual that it barely registers as a choice. A dog named Dan is the naming…
- Pet commentary
Dolores
Dolores — from the Spanish María de los Dolores , meaning "Our Lady of Sorrows" — carries considerable religious weight and considerable mid-century cultural residue. It peaked in…
- Pet commentary
Elena
Elena — the Spanish and Italian form of Helen, ultimately from the Greek Helene , associated with light or possibly with the Greek word for moon — is one of those names that manag…
- Pet commentary
Fenrir
Fenrir — the monstrous wolf of Norse mythology, son of Loki, prophesied to break free of his chains and swallow Odin at Ragnarök — is about as much name as you can give a dog. It…
- Pet commentary
Girl
"Girl" appearing 27 times as a registered pet name is a textbook registry artifact: owners who wrote a gender descriptor rather than a proper name, either as a placeholder, becaus…
- Pet commentary
Issa
Issa — Arabic for "Jesus" (from the Quran's rendering of the name), and also an independent West African name used in Nigeria and Senegal — became significantly more visible in Am…
- Pet commentary
Joan
Joan — the English feminine form of John, ultimately from the Hebrew Yohanan meaning "God is gracious" — is one of the mid-century's great names, currently sitting in the sweet sp…
- Pet commentary
Laney
Laney — a diminutive of Elaine, Lana, or Delaney, depending on which tradition the owner is drawing from — has that Southern-tinged sweetness of names like Gracie, Maggie, and Sad…
- Pet commentary
Louisa
Louisa is the Latinate feminine form of Louis, tracing back through Old French to the Germanic Hluodowig — "famous in battle." On a pet it reads as proper, bookish, and gently old…
- Pet commentary
Madden
Madden is an Irish surname meaning "descendant of Madán," from the Old Irish mathghamain meaning "bear." In American pet naming it arrives primarily as a sports-culture reference…
- Pet commentary
Micah
Micah is a Hebrew name meaning "who is like God?" — a rhetorical question that doubles as a declaration of divine incomparability. It belongs to the same Biblical tradition as Mic…
- Pet commentary
Moonlight
Moonlight is a nature-compound name — moon plus light — that lands at the romantic, slightly mystical end of the pet-naming spectrum. The word has been a poetic touchstone for cen…
- Pet commentary
Omega
Omega is the last letter of the Greek alphabet — the end, the final thing, the ultimate point — and carries that weight in every context it appears. As a pet name it projects ambi…
- Pet commentary
Pierogi
Pierogi — the Polish dumpling — is a food-name pet choice that belongs firmly in the category of owners who name their animals after things they love to eat. At rank 3147, this is…
- Pet commentary
Pony
Pony is a species-adjacent name — you're calling a dog or cat after a different, smaller equine — and that cross-species naming choice is always a deliberate irony or a sincere af…
- Pet commentary
Pudgy
Pudgy is an adjective-as-name that doubles as a physical description — meaning pleasantly round and chubby — and carries affection in every syllable. Calling a pet Pudgy is not a…
- Pet commentary
Riesling
Riesling is a German white wine grape — one of the most complex and age-worthy whites, with a reputation for precision, high acidity, and notes ranging from petrol to honey depend…
How we work
Editorial policy →
Topic selection, verification, corrections.
How we gather data
Methodology →
Sources, processing pipeline, limitations.