I know
[name_u]Ariel[/name_u]
[name_u]Stacey[/name_u]
[name_u]Shannon[/name_u]
[name_u]Ashley[/name_u]
[name_u]MacKenzie[/name_u]
[name_u]Taylor[/name_u] and [name_u]Morgan[/name_u]. Duh. [name_u]Taylor[/name_u] was one of the most popular names at my high school - for guys. Because of that I’ve never really thought of it as unisex. And [name_u]Morgan[/name_u] is firmly masculine to me because of its rugged, mountain man vibe and because of [name_m]Derek[/name_m] [name_u]Morgan[/name_u] on Criminal Minds. I also have a male cousin in his mid twenties named [name_u]Madison[/name_u]. I went to school with a male [name_u]Tracy[/name_u].
Knew lots of boys named [name_u]Ashley[/name_u], one named [name_u]Courtney[/name_u], one named [name_u]Kelly[/name_u], two named [name_f]Ceri[/name_f]. None of them ever had problems with their names, as far as I know. But we weren’t best friends or anything.
I went to school with a guy named [name_u]Makenzie[/name_u] and my friend is married to a guy named [name_u]Addison[/name_u] I knew several guys named Taylor and one little boy named Morgan. I actually prefer all of these names (except Makenzie) on boys rather than girls.
I know a man named [name_u]Hillary[/name_u] (nn Hills), a man named [name_u]Ariel[/name_u] (though he goes by his last name, which is also a masculine first name), and a few men named [name_u]Ashley[/name_u] (although [name_u]Ashley[/name_u] is common for boys in the UK).