1900+ Four Letter Boy Names
- Hunu
Origin:
MaoriMeaning:
"sunbeam"Description:
A beautiful meaning for a baby born in the summer or following a difficult time.
- Yoda
Origin:
SanskritMeaning:
"hero, warrior"Description:
Possibly a variation of the Sanskrit Yoddha or the Hebrew Yodea, it is most likely that this Star Wars characters' name is purely fictional.
- Luvo
Description:
With the "oo" sound all the rage these days, Luvo makes a good choice if you are looking for a name that is unusual but sounds on-trend.
- Ummo
- Wise
Origin:
English word nameDescription:
Wise is a lovely virtue to bestow upon a baby, as seen through the increasingly popular unisex choice Sage. Wise would make for a perfect middle name with the one-syllable flow.
- Hume
Origin:
Scottish variation of HolmesDescription:
Distinguished actor Hume Cronyn (who shared his father's name) put this unusual choice in the lexicon.
- Elul
Origin:
HebrewDescription:
Another culture's version of the month-naming tradition: this is the sixth month of the Jewish calendar.
- Eisa
- Roby
- Peio
- Uras
Origin:
Turkish surnameMeaning:
"master, craftsman"Description:
Uras is a Turkish surname that may be derived from the Proto-Turkic word ūŕ, referring to a master of their craft.
- Isha
Origin:
SanskritMeaning:
"master, lord"Description:
An epithet of the god Shiva in Hindu tradition.
- Erle
- Senn
Origin:
Dutch, meaning unknownDescription:
Modern Dutch invention — the name of a 2013 science fiction movie and its lead character.
- Eyan
- Bird
Origin:
Nature nameDescription:
A name that's unusual in that changing the i to a y -- as in Byrd -- makes it more masculine.
- Loup
Origin:
FrenchMeaning:
"wolf"Description:
A rare French name derived from Latin lupus "wolf". It is most often found in the compound name Jean-Loup, as in Jean-Loup Chrétien, an astronaut and the first Frenchman in space.
- Alix
- Yvet
- Rosh
Origin:
HebrewMeaning:
"chief"Description:
Rosh is not Ross, not Rush, but an improvement on both of those more familiar names. The Biblical Rosh was a son of Benjamin, so you might consider it to honor a father or otherwise ancestral Benjamin. Very much associated with the Jewish New Year holiday, Rosh Hashanah.