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Pamela in the US

  1. #62 Betty
  2. #63 Stephanie
  3. #64 Rebecca
  4. #65 Kathleen
  5. #66 Pamela
  6. #67 Brenda
  7. #68 Christine
  8. #69 Julie
  9. #70 Kelly

Clark in the US

  1. #19 White
  2. #20 Lee
  3. #21 Hernandez
  4. #22 Harris
  5. #23 Clark
  6. #24 Lopez
  7. #25 Gonzalez
  8. #26 Lewis
  9. #27 Robinson

Pamela Clark in the US

  1. #5,190 Lisa Parker
  2. #5,191 Michael Bishop
  3. #5,192 Monica Jones
  4. #5,193 Nathan Miller
  5. #5,194 Pamela Clark
  6. #5,195 Sergio Lopez
  7. #5,196 Teresa Wilson
  8. #5,197 Elizabeth Evans
  9. #5,198 Jr White
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Meaning & Origins

Invented by the Elizabethan pastoral poet Sir Philip Sidney (1554–86), in whose verse it is stressed on the second syllable. There is no clue to the sources that influenced Sidney in this coinage. It was later taken up by Samuel Richardson for the name of the heroine of his novel Pamela (1740). In Henry Fielding's Joseph Andrews (1742), which started out as a parody of Pamela, Fielding comments that the name is ‘very strange’.
66th in the U.S. for 2011
English: occupational name for a scribe or secretary, originally a member of a minor religious order who undertook such duties. The word clerc denoted a member of a religious order, from Old English cler(e)c ‘priest’, reinforced by Old French clerc. Both are from Late Latin clericus, from Greek klērikos, a derivative of klēros ‘inheritance’, ‘legacy’, with reference to the priestly tribe of Levites (see Levy) ‘whose inheritance was the Lord’. In medieval Christian Europe, clergy in minor orders were permitted to marry and so found families; thus the surname could become established. In the Middle Ages it was virtually only members of religious orders who learned to read and write, so that the term clerk came to denote any literate man.
23rd in the U.S. for 2011

Nicknames & variations

Top state populations

U.S. Distribution Map

Pamela Clark is most likely to live in Texas, California, Florida, Ohio, and Georgia

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