5000+ Boy Names That End in N

  1. Aharon
    • Origin:

      Variation of Aaron, Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "high mountain; exalted, enlightened"
    • Description:

      Aharon is one of the many variations of the Old Testament Aaron, one of the first Biblical patriarch names to become trendy in the modern world.
  2. Ezran
    • Doon
      • Devran
        • Origin:

          Turkish
        • Meaning:

          "world, fate, time"
        • Description:

          An attractive Turkish derived from an old-fashioned Turkish word meaning world, fate, or time — devran değişti is a phrase meaning "times have changed."
      • Elgin
        • Aberdeen
          • Origin:

            Scottish place-name
          • Description:

            Amiable, undiscovered geographic option.
        • Madyn
          • Origin:

            Irish
          • Meaning:

            "small dog"
          • Description:

            A variant of Madden or Madigan, cool surnames which ultimately derive from the Irish Gaelic word for "dog".
        • Brain
          • Origin:

            Misspelling of Brian
          • Description:

            Brain is not a name, it's a misspelling of the long-popular Brian. What's really astonishing is not that it made the Top 1000 at all but that it hung on there for 25 years, from 1965 through 1989, Brian's heyday. All we can say is: sad.
        • Rubén
          • Origin:

            Spanish, from Hebrew
          • Meaning:

            "behold, a son"
          • Description:

            The Spanish form of Reuben.
        • Augusten
          • Origin:

            German variation of Augustus, Augustine, Augustin
          • Meaning:

            "great, magnificent"
          • Description:

            Confessional memoirist Augusten Burroughs is the first literary notable to bear one of this family of names since the confessional saint.
        • Alcuin
          • Origin:

            Germanic
          • Meaning:

            "sanctuary friend"
          • Description:

            An Old French and English name thought to derive from the Germanic elements alah "sanctuary" and win "friend". Variant forms include Alcwin and Alawin.
        • Šimun
          • Origin:

            Croatian form of Simon, from Hebrew and Greek
          • Meaning:

            "he has heard; flat-nosed"
        • Glyn
          • Origin:

            Welsh
          • Meaning:

            "valley, glen"
          • Description:

            Very popular in Wales; this could make a nice middle name in honor of a Grandpa Glenn.
        • Savin
          • Jurgen
            • Origin:

              Dutch variation of George
            • Meaning:

              "farmer"
          • Jolyon
            • Origin:

              Medieval form of Julian
            • Meaning:

              "youthful"
            • Description:

              Galsworthy used this for "The Forsyte Saga," but in modern real life Julian would work better.
          • Athelstan
            • Origin:

              Anglo-Saxon
            • Meaning:

              "noble stone"
            • Description:

              The name of the first English king, who ruled in the 10th century AD.
          • Zebulun
            • Origin:

              Biblical place-name
            • Description:

              It's a place in the Bible but also relates to the name Zebulon.
          • Zimran
            • Origin:

              Hebrew
            • Meaning:

              "song"
            • Description:

              In the Bible, a son of Abraham and Keturah; this ancient and musical name nonetheless sounds like a character in a 1950s science fiction movie.
          • Mawgan
            • Origin:

              Cornish
            • Meaning:

              "praise"
            • Description:

              In its native Cornwall, Mawgan is identical in pronunciation to Morgan, a Welsh name of separate origins. Mawgan comes from the Old Welsh mawl, meaning "praise," and is the name of a Cornish saint.