Jack (given name)
Pronunciation | /dʒæk/ |
---|---|
Gender | Male |
Origin | |
Word/name | Middle English, indirect diminutive of "John". It could be derived also from Jacques, the French form for Jacob or James |
Meaning | "God Is Gracious" or "Supplanter" |
Other names | |
Nickname(s) | Jackie, Jacky |
Related names | John, Jacob, Jackie, James, Jackson, Johnny, Jacqueline, Jacques, Jake, Jay, Jaco, Jacobi, Johann, Johannes, Joachim |
Jack is a male given name. Since the late 20th century, Jack has become one of the most common names for boys in many English-speaking countries. While Jack is now a proper name in its own right, in English, it was traditionally used as a diminutive form of John. It can also be used as a diminutive for: Jacob, Jason, Jonathan, Johann, Johannes, Joachim and sometimes for James, from its French form Jacques. It is also used as a female given name (often a shortened version of Jacqueline or Jackie)[1] and as a surname to a lesser extent.
The word jack is also commonly used in other contexts in English for many occupations, objects and actions, linked to the use of the word as a metaphor for a common man.
Origin
Jack is thought to have originated in medieval times, derived from Jankin (c.f. Jenkin), a common diminutive of the name John.[citation needed]
'Jackie' has also been used among men (Jackie Coogan, Jackie Cooper, and Jackie Gleason were all formally named John). This diminutive of Jack is thought by some to have hailed from the earlier Jackin (from the name Jankin).[2][3] Alternatively, it may be derived from the name Jacques, the French form of the name James or Jacob.[2] There is also a theory that it is Celtic in origin, meaning "healthy, strong, full of vital energy" (compare the Welsh word iach, "health"), from a putative Ancient British Yakkios.[4] Whatever its origins, both the name and the word "jack" were long used as a term to refer to any man, especially of the common classes.[5][6]
Frequency
Given name
Jack has become increasingly used as a formal, registered name, rather than a nickname, for boys in several English-speaking countries. It is now more popular in its own right than John, James and Jacob where it is originally derived from. In recent years, Jack has been the most common given name for baby boys in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Australia, and has grown in popularity in the United States. Jack was also the most popular baby boy's name in Scotland from 1999–2002, again in 2006, and from 2008 to the present; where it continues to be the most popular boy's name. From 2003–05 and again in 2007, Jack was reduced to second place after Lewis took the #1 spot.
Although the use of Jack as a formal given name is a recent phenomenon, John – from which Jack was often derived – was, along with William, the most frequent male name throughout the nineteenth century and in the first half of the twentieth century.[7] Jack was included on lists of the most frequently used male baby names in the UK for 2003–2007.[8][9][10] In 1994, Jack was the most popular name in London but was not among the 10 most popular in the preceding 970 years.[7][failed verification] A survey in December 2008 showed that Jack was the most popular name in the UK for the fourteenth consecutive year, since it overtook Thomas in 1994.[citation needed]
In 2014, Jack was again the most popular name for baby boys in Ireland.[11]
In 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2013, Jack was the most common name given to boys in Australia.[12]
According to the United States Census of 1990, "Jack" is an uncommon American name, the given name for 0.315% of the male population and 0.001% of the female population.[1][13][14] However, the frequency of Jack as a baby name has steadily increased from the 160–170 rank prior to 1991 to a rank of 35 in 2006.[15]
Jock is a common diminutive of the name John in Scotland, where Jack is rarely used in this context.
Surname
The occurrence of Jack as a surname is much less frequent than its use as a male forename. In 1990, in the United States, this surname is shared by about 0.007% of the population, though the geographical distribution of the surname has been broad since at least 1840, at which time there was a modest concentration of Jacks in Pennsylvania.[13][16][17] Within the United Kingdom, the surname is considered almost exclusively Scottish.[18] In the late-nineteenth century, the geographic distribution of Jacks in England was also broad, with concentration in North East England, Yorkshire and the Humber, and southern North West England.[19] In 1891, the highest concentration of Jacks in the United Kingdom appeared in Scotland.
Other uses in English
The name Jack is unusual in the English language for its frequent use as a noun or verb for many common objects and actions, and in many compound words and phrases.
Examples include implements, such as a car jack, knucklebones (the game jacks), or the jack in bowls.
The word is also used in other words and phrases such as: apple jack, hijack, jack of clubs (playing card), jack straw (scarecrow), jack tar (sailor), jack-in-the-box, jack-of-all-trades, jack o'lantern, jackdaw, jackhammer, jackknife, jackpot, lumberjack, union jack, etc.
The history of the word is linked to the name being used as a by-name for a man.[5]
People with the given name
- Jack Abel (1927–1996), American comic book artist
- Jack Abramoff (born 1959), American former lobbyist, businessman, movie producer, and writer, convicted of corruption
- Jack Adams (disambiguation)
- Jack Aker, American former Major League Baseball pitcher
- Jack Albertson (1907–1981), American actor
- Jack Angel, American actor
- Jack Arute, American former sportscaster
- Jack Asher, English cinematographer
- Jack Avery, American singer in boy band Why Don't We
- Jack Barakat, lead guitarist for punk rock band All Time Low
- Jack Benny, American comedian, vaudevillian, actor, and violinist
- Jack Blott, All-American football center and place kicker
- Jack Brabham, Australian racing driver
- Jack Brickhouse, American sportscaster
- Jack Brisco, American professional wrestler
- Jack Bruce (1943–2014), Scottish musician, composer, and vocalist
- Jack Buck, American sportscaster
- Jack Cade, the leader of a popular revolt against the government of England in 1450
- Jack Bridger Chalker, British artist and teacher
- Jack L. Chalker, American science fiction author
- Jack Charlton, English former footballer and manager
- Jack Chesbro, Major League Baseball pitcher
- Jack T. Chick, American publisher, writer, and comic book artist of evangelical fundamentalist Christian tracts and comic books
- Jack Cichy, American football player
- Jack Clarke (Australian footballer, born 1933), Australian rules footballer and coach in the VFL
- Jack Clement (1931–2013), American singer-songwriter, record producer
- Jack Cock, English footballer
- Jack Kent Cooke, Canadian entrepreneur
- Jack Coombs, Major League Baseball pitcher
- Jack Cork, English footballer
- Jack Crawford (disambiguation)
- Jack Crisp, Australian rules football player
- Jack Cronin (1874–1929), American Major League Baseball pitcher
- Jack Cronin (American football), American football player
- Jack Cust, American former professional baseball player
- Jack Daly, Irish politician
- Jack Daniels (disambiguation)
- Jack Dann, American writer
- Jack Dee, English stand-up comedian, actor, and writer
- Jack DeJohnette, American jazz drummer, pianist, and composer
- Jack Del Rio, American football coach
- Jack Dempsey (disambiguation)
- Jack Doan, American professional wrestling referee
- Jack Dorsey, Co-founder and CEO of Twitter
- Jack Douglass, American YouTube comedian of "jacksfilms" fame
- Jack Dromey, British Labour Party politician and trade unionist
- Jack Dugger, American football player
- Jack Dyer (1913–2003), Australian rules football player and coach, broadcaster and journalist
- Jack Eichel (born 1996), American National Hockey League player
- Jack Elam, American actor
- Jack Elder, New Zealand former politician
- Jack Ellena, American football player
- Jack Elway, American football player and head coach
- Jack Ely, American guitarist and singer
- Jack Endino, producer and musician based in Seattle
- Jack Evans (disambiguation)
- Jack Faber, American microbiologist and college football and lacrosse coach
- Jack Falahee, American actor
- Jack Fellure, American perennial political candidate and retired engineer
- Jack Fingleton, Australian cricketer
- Jack Finney, American author
- Jack Fleck, American professional golfer
- Jack Foley (disambiguation)
- Jack Fultz, American retired long-distance runner
- Joaquín "Jack" García, Cuban-American FBI agent
- Jack Garfinkel, American basketball player
- Jack Givens, American retired collegiate and professional basketball player
- Jack Glasscock, American Major League Baseball player
- Jack Gilinsky, member of the American pop-rap duo Jack & Jack
- Jack Gold, British film and television director
- Jack Goody, British social anthropologist
- Jack Gotta, American-born Canadian professional football player, coach, and general manager
- Jack Graf, two-sport athlete
- Jack Graney, Canadian Major League Baseball player
- Jack Grant, Australian rules footballer
- Jack Dylan Grazer, American Actor
- Jack Grealish, English footballer
- Jack Greenwell, English footballer and manager
- Jack Haden, American football player
- Jack Hale, Australian rules footballer
- Jack Haley (disambiguation)
- Jack Halliday (American football), American football player
- Jack Ham, former American football linebacker
- Jack Hanna, American zookeeper
- Jack Hannah, animator, writer, and director of animated shorts
- Jack Harper (disambiguation)
- Jack Herer, American cannabis activist
- Jack Hill (disambiguation)
- Jack Hirsch, American basketball player and coach
- Jack Hirsh (born c. 1941), Canadian clinician and scientist
- Jack Hobbs, English professional cricketer
- Jack Hoffman (American football), American football player
- Jack Holt (disambiguation)
- Jack Huston, English actor
- Jack Hyles, leading figure in the Independent Baptist movement
- Jack Iddon, English cricketer
- Jack Ikin, English cricketer
- Jack Ingram (disambiguation)
- Jack Iroga, sprinter from the Solomon Islands
- Jack Irons, American musician
- Jack Iverson, Australian cricketer
- Jack Jacobs (disambiguation)
- Jack Jewsbury, American soccer player
- Jack Johnson (disambiguation)
- Jack Jones (disambiguation)
- Jack Kamen, American illustrator
- Jack Katz, American businessman
- Jack Keane, retired four-star general, former Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Army, and defense analyst
- Jack Kemp, American politician and collegiate and professional football player
- John F. Kennedy, American president
- Jack Kerouac, American novelist
- Jack Ketch, English executioner employed by King Charles II
- Jack Kevorkian, American doctor
- Jack Kilby, American electrical engineer
- Jack Kirby (disambiguation)
- Jack Klugman, American actor
- Jack Kornfield, American author and teacher in the vipassana movement in American Theravada Buddhism
- Jack Ladyman, American politician
- Jack Layton (1950–2011), Canadian politician
- Jack Leathersich, American baseball player
- Jack Lemmon (1925–2001), American actor
- Jack Lew, American government administrator, attorney, and 76th United States Secretary of the Treasury
- Jack Lindsay, writer
- Jack London (disambiguation)
- Jack Lord, American actor
- Jack Lowden, Scottish actor
- Jack Lynch (disambiguation)
- Jack Ma, Chinese entrepreneur and philanthropist
- Jack Mack, Australian rules footballer
- Jack Mara, co-owner of the New York Giants football franchise
- Jack Markell, American politician
- Jack Marsh, Australian first-class cricketer
- Jack McBrayer, American comedic actor
- Jack McCall, murderer of Old West legend Wild Bill Hickok
- Jack McConnell, former First Minister of Scotland
- Jack McCracken, American basketball player in 1930s and 1940s
- Jack McKinney (basketball) (1935–2018), American basketball coach
- Jack McVite, British criminal
- Jack Morelli, American comic book letterer
- Jack Morris, American former Major League Baseball pitcher
- Jack Nance, American actor
- Jack Narz, American television announcer and game show host
- Jack Nasher, German business psychologist, author, and professor
- Jack Neo, Singaporean film and television actor, host, and director
- Jack Newman (disambiguation)
- Jack Nicholson, American actor
- Jack Nicklaus, American golfer
- Jack Nitzsche, musician, arranger, producer, songwriter, and film score composer
- Jack Novak, American former professional football player
- Jack Null, American college basketball coach
- Jack Oakie, American actor
- Jack O'Connell (disambiguation)
- Jack Ohman, editorial cartoonist
- Jack Okey, American art director
- Jack Oleck, American novelist and comic book writer
- Jack Olsen, American journalist and author
- Jack O'Neill (disambiguation)
- Jack Osbourne, English media personality
- Jack O'Shea (born 1957), Irish former Gaelic footballer
- Jack Owen (disambiguation)
- Jack Paar, American author, comedian, and talk show host
- Jack Palance, American actor
- Jack Pardee (1936–2013), American National Football League player and head coach
- Jack Parsons (disambiguation)
- Jack Patera, American former football player and coach in the National Football League
- Jack Peart, English footballer
- Jack Pickersgill, Canadian civil servant and politician
- Jack Joseph Puig, Grammy Award-winning music engineer and producer
- Jack Quaid, American actor
- Jack Quinlan, American sportscaster
- Jack Quinn (disambiguation)
- Jack N. Rakove, American historian, author, professor, and Pulitzer Prize winner
- Jack Ralite, French politician
- Jack Ramsay, American basketball coach
- Jack Reed (disambiguation)
- Jack Regan (disambiguation)
- Jack Rieley, American record producer
- Jack Riewoldt, Australian rules footballer
- Jack Rosenthal, English playwright
- Jack Roush, founder, CEO, and co-owner of Roush Fenway Racing
- Jack Ruby, nightclub operator who killed Lee Harvey Oswald
- Jack Russell (disambiguation)
- Jack Sack (1902–1980), American football player and coach
- Jack Shepherd (disambiguation)
- Jack Sikma, American retired National Basketball Association center
- Jack Snelling, Australian politician
- Jack Sock, American tennis player
- Jack Souther, American-Canadian geologist
- Jack Steinberger (born 1921), American physicist
- Jack Straw, British politician
- Jack Swagger, American professional wrestler
- Jack Swift, Australian paratriathlete
- Jack Tatum (1948–2010), American National Football League player
- Jack Taylor (basketball) (born 1990), American basketball player
- Jack Tighe, American Major League Baseball head coach
- Jack Titus, Australian rules football player
- Jack Tocho, American football player
- Jack Trice, American football player
- Jack Troy, Australian rugby league footballer
- Jack Twyman, American basketball player and sports broadcaster
- Jack Ulrich, Canadian ice hockey right winger
- Jack Underman, American basketball player
- Jack Underwood, football player
- Jack Unruh, commercial illustrator
- Jack Unterweger, Austrian serial killer
- Jack Urban, former Major League Baseball pitcher
- Jack Vale (disambiguation)
- Jack Valenti, longtime president of the Motion Picture Association of America
- Jack Van Berg, American Hall-of-Fame horse trainer
- Jack Van Impe, American televangelist
- Jack Vance, American science fiction, fantasy, and mystery writer
- Jack Vettriano, Scottish painter
- Jack Victory, American professional wrestler and manager
- Jack Vidgen, Australian singer
- Jack Viney, Australian rules football player
- Jack Voigt, former Major League Baseball outfielder
- Jack Vosti, Australian rules footballer
- Jack Waite, American former tennis player
- Jack Warner (disambiguation)
- Jack Webb, American actor, television producer, director, and screenwriter
- Jack Welch (disambiguation)
- Jack White (disambiguation)
- Jack Wild, English actor
- Jack Williamson, American science fiction writer
- Jack Wilshere, English footballer
- Jack Witikka, Finnish film director
- Jack Liangjie Xu, former Co-President and Chief Technology Officer of SINA Corporation
- Jack Yan, New Zealand publisher, designer, and businessman
- Jack Yang, Harvard scientist
- Jack Yarber, American singer, songwriter, and guitarist
- Jack Yeandle, English rugby union player
- Jack Yellen, American lyricist and screenwriter
- Jack Yerman, American former sprinter
- Jack Yost, American politician
- Jack Youngblood, American former college and professional football player
- Jack Youngerman, American artist
- Jack Zajac, American artist
- Jack Zduriencik, Major League Baseball general manager
- Jack Zelig, American gangster
- Jack Zeller, American baseball executive
- Jack Zhao, Chinese contract bridge player
- Jack Ziebell, Australian rules footballer
- Jack Zilly, American football player
- Jack Zipes, American retired professor of German
- Jack Zouhary, American federal judge
- Jack Zunz (1923–2018), British civil engineer and former chairman of Ove Arup & Partners
Fictional characters
Folklore and nursery rhymes
- Jack Frost, bringer of winter
- Jack (hero), an archetypal English hero of such fairy tales as "Jack and the Beanstalk"
- "Jack and Jill"
- "Jack Be Nimble"
- "Jack Spratt"
- "Little Jack Horner"
Films and novels
- Jack Aubrey, an officer in the Royal Navy of the Napoleonic Wars, one of the two main characters in the Aubrey–Maturin series by Patrick O'Brian
- Jack Burton (character), from the film Big Trouble in Little China
- Jack Crawford (character), in the Hannibal Lecter book series and various adaptations
- Jack Callaghan, from the 1995 film While You Were Sleeping
- Jack "Caul" Bentham, the abusive older brother of Alma Peregrine from the novels Hollow City and Library of Souls
- Jack Dawson, from the 1997 film Titanic
- Jack Frost, from the 1997 film Jack Frost
- Jack Harper, protagonist of the 2013 film Oblivion
- Jack Kelly, main character in the 1992 film Newsies and the 2011 musical
- Jack Merridew, character in Lord of the Flies, by William Golding
- Jack Reacher, protagonist in a series of novels by Lee Child
- Jack Ryan (character), in Tom Clancy books and film adaptations
- Jack Skellington, from the film The Nightmare Before Christmas
- Jack Sparrow, protagonist of the Pirates of the Caribbean films
- Jack Torrance, from the film The Shining
- Jack West Jr, protagonist in a series of novels written by Matthew Reilly
- Jack, a pseudonym used for the Narrator in the 1999 film Fight Club
Television
- Jack Bauer, main character in the series 24
- Jack Branning, in the BBC soap opera EastEnders
- Jack Carter (Eureka), in the series Eureka
- Jack Donaghy, in the series 30 Rock
- Jack Duckworth, in the UK soap opera Coronation Street
- Fr Jack Hackett, in the series Father Ted
- Jack Harkness, main character in the series Torchwood and a recurring character in the series Doctor Who
- Jack Hodgins (Bones), in the series Bones
- Jack Kline, one of the main characters in the series Supernatural
- Jack Landors, in Power Rangers SPD
- Jack McFarland, in the sitcom Will & Grace
- Jack O'Neill, main character in the series Stargate SG-1
- Jack Shephard, main character in the series Lost
- Jack Spicer, villain in the series Xiaolin Showdown
- Jack Tripper, protagonist of the sitcoms Three's Company and Three's a Crowd
- Jack Pearson, main character in the TV series This is Us
- Jack the Front Loader, in Thomas and Friends
- Jack, main character in the series Jack's Big Music Show
- Ultraman Jack, the main character of The Return of Ultraman
Video games
- Jack, a main character in Minecraft Story Mode, Season 2
- Handsome Jack, the main antagonist from Borderlands 2
- Jack (Tekken), multiple characters from the Tekken series
- Jack, a.k.a. Big Boss (Metal Gear) or Naked Snake, from the Metal Gear Solid series
- Jack, a.k.a. Raiden, from the Metal Gear Solid series
- Jack (BioShock), a.k.a. Jack Ryan, the silent protagonist of BioShock
- Jack Rourke, the protagonist of Need for Speed: The Run
- Jack Marston, in Red Dead Redemption and Red Dead Redemption 2
- Jack Cayman, the protagonist of MadWorld
Mascots
- Jack Box, mascot of the American restaurant chain Jack in the Box
- Jack the Bulldog, Georgetown University mascot
See also
References
- ^ a b "Name search results". Search name files from 1990 Census. United States Census Bureau. 2007-09-07. Archived from the original on 1997-02-07. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
NAME(female):JACK ; RANK:3217; %FREQ (CUMM FREQ):0.001 (88.832)
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b "Jack". Thinkbabynames.com. n.d. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
- ^ Campbell, Mike (n.d.). "Behind the Name: Meaning, Origin and History of the Name Jack". Behind the Name. Mike Campbell. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
- ^ "English words of British origin – dexsowā". Google Sites. n.d. Retrieved March 30, 2012.[unreliable source?]
- ^ a b JACK (Encyclopædia Britannica, 1910). Retrieved 2011-02-04.
- ^ "Dictionary entry, jack". Dictionary.com. Ask.com. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
- ^ a b Galbi, Douglas A. (2002-07-20). "Long-Term Trends in Personal Given Name Frequencies in England and Wales". 1.1. (self-published). Retrieved 2008-02-10.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ "Top 100 names for baby boys in England and Wales". National Statistics Online. Office for National Statistics. 2007. Archived from the original on May 22, 2011. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Jack and Katie are the most popular baby names in Northern Ireland". News. Department of Finance and Personnel, Northern Ireland. 2007-12-19. Archived from the original on 2012-04-12. Retrieved 2008-02-10.
Jack has been the most popular boys name since 2003....
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Jack and Emma were the most popular first names in Northern Ireland in 2003" (PDF) (Press release). Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency. 2004-01-02. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-09-29. Retrieved 2008-02-14.
Jack and Emma were the most popular first names given to children whose births were registered in Northern Ireland in 2003
{{cite press release}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "So, what were the most-popular baby names in Ireland last year?". Kidspot. January 9, 2015. Retrieved 2015-01-21.
- ^ "Australia's 100 most popular baby names". Kidspot. April 2, 2013. Archived from the original on January 10, 2014. Retrieved 2014-01-10.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b The male, female, and total populations of the United States in the 1990 census were 121,239,418; 127,470,455; and 248,709,873, respectively. Information from "General Population and Housing Characteristics: 1990". 1990 Summary Tape File 1 (STF 1) – 100-Percent data. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
- ^ "Name search results". Search name files from 1990 Census. United States Census Bureau. 2007-09-07. Archived from the original on 1997-02-07. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
NAME(male):JACK ; RANK:53; %FREQ (CUMM FREQ):0.315 (48.102)
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Popular baby names
- ^ "Name search results". Search name files from 1990 Census. United States Census Bureau. 2007-09-07. Archived from the original on 1997-02-07. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
NAME(last):JACK ; RANK:1852; %FREQ (CUMM FREQ):0.007 (50.991)
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Jack Family History Facts 1840". Family Facts. The Generations Network, Inc. Retrieved 2008-02-10.
- ^ Retrieved 08–24–11
- ^ "Jack Families Living in England and Wales in 1891". Family Facts. The Generations Network, Inc. Retrieved 2008-02-10.