OCCUPATION NAMES

  1. Clerk
    • Coleman
      • Origin:

        English and Irish
      • Meaning:

        "little dove"
      • Description:

        The name of three hundred saints, a mustard, and your own baby boy. Coleman was off the US Top 1000 list for much of the 1960s and 1970s, but it was a mainstay before and has been for most years since. It could be an interesting way to honor a Colin or Cole.
    • COOK
      • Cooper
        • Origin:

          English occupational name
        • Meaning:

          "barrel maker"
        • Description:

          The genial yet upscale and preppy Cooper was one of the first occupational last names to catch on -- and Cooper remains a pleasing option.
      • Cutler
        • Origin:

          English occupational name
        • Meaning:

          "knife maker"
        • Description:

          Cooper would be a more engaging C-starting occupational choice.
      • Chamberlain
        • Deacon
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "messenger, servant"
          • Description:

            This name was transposed from the word for a church officer to a baby name when Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Phillippe chose it for their son, after a baseball player ancestor, and Don Johnson followed suit. Its popularity also got a boost from Nashville character Deacon Claybourne -- only to fall a bit in recent years.
        • Dean
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "church official"
          • Description:

            Dean may sound to some like a retro surfer boy name, but it is once again climbing up the popularity chart in the USA. For decades it was associated with Dean (born Dino) Martin; more recent representatives include Dean Cain, Dean McDermott and Dean Koontz -- not to mention Jared Padalecki's dreamy Dean Forester in Gilmore Girls.
        • Dexter
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "dyer, right-handed"
          • Description:

            The jazzy, ultra-cool Dexter, like most names with an "x," has a lot of energy and dynamism. Over the years, it's been attached to a number of diverse real and fictional personalities—C. K. Dexter Haven, the witty Cary Grant character in The Philadelphia Story; Dexter Green, the protagonist of the F. Scott Fitzgerald story "Winter Dreams"; great jazz tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon; the boy-genius protagonist of cartoon Dexter's Laboratory; and the most recent TV series Dexter based on the books by Jeff Lindsay, whose lead happens to be a genial but sociopathic serial killer.
        • Draper
          • Origin:

            English occupational name
          • Meaning:

            "cloth merchant"
          • Description:

            Other occupational names would be more commonly accepted, though the Mad Men character has certainly brought it to the fore.
        • Driver
          • Origin:

            Word or occupational name
          • Description:

            Driver seems prime for adoption as a first name, with the rise of occupational names ranging from Archer to Ranger to Sawyer.
        • DUCHESS
          • Duke
            • Origin:

              English rank of nobility
            • Description:

              While John Wayne and Duke Ellington are worthy role models, the reason Duke is currently enjoying a revival and returned to the Top 1000 in 2013 as one of the year's fastest-rising boys’ names is more likely due to the name given to high-profile TV couple Giuliana and Bill Rancic. Christened Edward Duke, he has always been called by his middle name, just as Edward Duke Ellington was. Duke is just one of several aristocratic titles being increasingly used by ordinary citizens.
          • Earl
            • Origin:

              English aristocratic title
            • Description:

              Earl is a title name - brought to England by the vikings - that's out of fashion right now, unlike King and Duke. Its peak popularity was in the 1920s, which gives it a dusty great-grandpa feel, but there are also younger Earls in pop culture, like the reformed criminal in "My Name is Earl".
          • Farmer
            • Origin:

              Occupational name
            • Meaning:

              "farmer"
            • Description:

              Shepherd is soaring in the charts, so why not Farmer? Perhaps because, unlike some of the occupation names that are so popular today, it is still an everyday word. Even so, if you're looking for a name that fits modern trends but no one else is using, Farmer could be the one.
          • Ferris
            • Origin:

              Irish, English
            • Meaning:

              "strong man or ironworker"
            • Description:

              It’s been more than three decades since Ferris Bueller took his famous day off in the cult classic 1986 teen comedy movie, but we think the time for this name could and should be now! Especially with the recent rise of the hero's girlfriend, Sloane, up the baby name rankings. Half preppy, half rugged, it boasts that stylish S ending and has a cozy, retro feel.
          • Fisher
            • Origin:

              Occupational name
            • Meaning:

              "fisherman"
            • Description:

              As a member of two trendy name categories, animal and occupational, this name broke into the Top 1000 in 2004 and would make a nice tribute to an angler Grandpa.
          • Fletcher
            • Origin:

              English occupational name
            • Meaning:

              "arrow-maker"
            • Description:

              Fletcher is a common surname with a touch of quirkiness; it definitely fits into the So Far Out It's In category--and moving further in all the time along with other occupational names from Parker to Forester.
          • Fowler
            • Fuller
              • Origin:

                English surname
              • Meaning:

                "cloth cleanser"
              • Description:

                An occupational surname that hasn't made the limelight like Carter, Baker, etc., but is equally stylish.