Boy Baby Names ♥

  1. Benicio
    • Origin:

      Spanish
    • Meaning:

      "blessed"
    • Description:

      Softer than Benedict, less popular than Benjamin, and bolder than Bennett, Puerto Rican actor Benicio Del Toro introduced this name to the American mainstream in the early 2000s, before which the name was hardly use. Popular in Argentina, Benicio debuted on the US Top 1000 in 2016, when it was the third-fastest-rising boys' name, and while it hasn't skyrocketed then, it remains comfortably in the charts.
  2. Bruce
    • Origin:

      Scottish and English from French
    • Meaning:

      "from the brushwood thicket"
    • Description:

      Bruce is a Norman place name made famous by the Scottish king Robert the Bruce, who won Scotland's independence from England in the fourteenth century. It's perennially popular in Scotland, but has been rarely used here for a generation -- though the impact of Bruces Lee, Springsteen, Dern and Willis, as well as Batman's Bruce Wayne -- still lingers. At one time Bruce was so widespread in Australia, it became a nickname for any Ozzie man. An interesting alternative is Brix, the Normandy place name where the Bruce family originated.
  3. Bem
    • Cael
      • Origin:

        Irish
      • Meaning:

        "slender"
      • Description:

        Cael is the name of the angel of the zodiac sign of Cancer and also of a warrior of Irish mythology. Its ascendance to the Top 1000 over the past decade probably has to do with its similarity to Cale and Kale (and Kyle and Cayden etcetera).
    • Dom
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Dominic, Latin
      • Meaning:

        "belonging to the Lord"
      • Description:

        A bit slight to put directly on the birth certificate, but Dom is a pleasant nickname for a boy or a girl.
    • Elijah
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "Yahweh is God"
      • Description:

        The Top 10 boys' name Elijah is derived from the Hebrew name Eliyahu, composed of the elements ’el and yah, both of which refer to God. In the Old Testament, Elijah was the prophet who went to heaven in a chariot of fire, a story sure to inspire any young Elijah.
    • Evan
      • Origin:

        Welsh variation of John
      • Meaning:

        "God is gracious"
      • Description:

        Evan has a mellow nice-guy image that has kept it popular, while it has been widely used in Wales since the nineteenth century. And interestingly—and surprisingly—enough, Evan charts highly for boys in France.
    • Henrico
      • Iago
        • Origin:

          Welsh and Galician variation of James and Jacob
        • Description:

          Iago, the villain of Shakespeare's Othello, was so treacherously evil that his name has hardly ever been heard offstage. Try the much-more-benign Inigo.
      • Kian
        • Origin:

          Irish; Persian
        • Meaning:

          "ancient; king"
        • Description:

          A friendly Irish and Persian name chosen by Geena Davis for one of her twin boys, whose father is Iranian.
      • Levi
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "joined, attached"
        • Description:

          Levi, lighter and more energetic than most biblical names, with its up vowel ending, combines Old Testament gravitas with the casual flair associated with Levi Strauss jeans.
      • Liam
        • Origin:

          Irish short form of William
        • Meaning:

          "resolute protection"
        • Description:

          Liam is the top boys' name in the US, holding the Number 1 spot for the past seven years and also ranking as one of the most popular boys' names around the western world.
      • Lorenzo
        • Origin:

          Italian variation of Laurence
        • Meaning:

          "from Laurentium"
        • Description:

          Latinizing Lawrence gives it a whole new lease on life. Like Leonardo, Lorenzo has been integrated into the American stockpot of names, partly via actor Lorenzo Lamas. Other associations are with Lorenzo de' Medici, the Florentine Renaissance merchant prince and art patron, Renaissance artists Ghiberti and Lotto, and the upstanding young man who married Shylock's daughter Jessica in Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice.
      • Matteo
        • Origin:

          Italian
        • Meaning:

          "gift of God"
        • Description:

          This attractively energetic Italian version of the classic Matthew is primed to move further and further into mainstream American nomenclature. Mateo is technically the Spanish version, but many parents in the US use the two spellings interchangeably.
      • Olin
        • Origin:

          Swedish, Norwegian, English
        • Meaning:

          "ancestor, to inherit, legacy; from the low-lying land"
        • Description:

          Distinctive yet familiar, Olin is both a Scandinavian name and an English surname. Currently a rare choice, yet reminiscent of popular options, like Oliver, Orion, and Colin.
      • Oliver
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "olive tree or elf army"
        • Description:

          Oliver is an international star, ranking near the top of the charts in the US and throughout the English-speaking world, along with a host of European and Latin American countries, from Norway to Chile, Slovenia to Switzerland.
      • Paolo
        • Origin:

          Italian, variation of Paul
        • Meaning:

          "small"
        • Description:

          Paolo is an irresistibly lush Italian name for boys, worlds more romantic than its spare English equivalent.
      • Pietro
        • Origin:

          Italian variation of Peter
        • Description:

          Yet another winning international form of Peter.
      • Rafaello
        • Sam
          • Origin:

            English, diminutive of Samuel
          • Meaning:

            "told by God"
          • Description:

            Sam has long been used on its own for boys, as accepted standing by itself as it is as a short form of Samuel. Straightforward and down-to-earth, Sam is the name of the son of the co-stars of The Americans, Keri Russell and Matthew Rhys. Sam is one of the most popular names that start with S in the Western world, ranking higher in several European countries than it does in the US, where it's trended downward since the 19th century, though it's always been in the Top 1000.