Names Of My Favorite Fictional Characters

  1. Castle
    • Daenerys
      • Origin:

        Literary name
      • Description:

        Daenerys is yet another girls' name invented by "Game of Thrones" author George R. R. Martin that is beginning to gain some traction in real life. Daenerys was used for 67 baby girls in 2013 while one of the character's titles, Khaleesi, was given to 241 baby girls. And the name Arya, also from the hyper-popular series, is one of the fastest growing girls' names in the country.
    • Damianos
      • Dana
        • Origin:

          English, Slavic, Persian, Arabic
        • Meaning:

          "from Denmark, gift, or wise"
        • Description:

          This name found in both Celtic and Scandinavian mythology has gone from all-boy to almost all-girl, retaining a strong, unisex quality. However, it has dropped following its three-decade heyday from the 1960s to the 1990s.
      • Dante
        • Origin:

          Latin diminutive of Durant
        • Meaning:

          "enduring"
        • Description:

          Though closely associated with the great medieval Florentine poet Dante Alighieri -- who's so famous most people skip the last name -- it's not as much of a one-man name as you might think. Heck, it's not even a one-poet name, thanks to British pre-Rapahaelite Dante Gabriel Rosetti. Though especially well used in the Italian-American community, it would make a striking name for any little boy.
      • Darius
        • Origin:

          Latin, Greek, Persian
        • Meaning:

          "possessing goodness"
        • Description:

          Darius is a historic name via Emperor Darius the Great, a key figure in ancient Persian history, and several other Persian kings. His name today has an appealingly artistic image, which might well be found on a concert program or gallery announcement.
      • Day
        • Origin:

          English word name
        • Meaning:

          "the time of light between one night and the next"
        • Description:

          Many African tribes have a tradition of naming children for the day or time they were born -- Friday, Afternoon -- a practice finding new life in the Western world as word names become more popular.
      • Derek
        • Origin:

          English from German form of Theodoric
        • Meaning:

          "the people's ruler"
        • Description:

          Derek started out as a sophisticated Brit, but the name became so common over the last decades of the twentieth century that it lost much of its English accent, along with its stylish edge. Derek was a Top 100 name in the U.S. for 25 years, from 1970 to 1995.
      • Danzi
        • Eona
          • Eragon
            • Felicity
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Meaning:

                "good fortune, happy"
              • Description:

                Felicity is as accessible a virtue name as Hope and Faith, but much more feminine -- and dare we say, happier. The hit TV show did a lot to soften and modernize the once buttoned-up image of Felicity, and it got further notice as the red-haired Colonial doll, Felicity Merriman, in the American Girl series. A current bearer is actress Felicity Huffman.
            • Finn
              • Origin:

                Irish
              • Meaning:

                "fair or white"
              • Description:

                Finn is a name with enormous energy and charm, that of the greatest hero of Irish mythology, Finn MacCool (aka Fionn mac Cuumhaill), an intrepid warrior with mystical supernatural powers, noted as well for his wisdom and generosity.
            • Fox
              • Origin:

                Animal name
              • Description:

                Fox is one animal name backed by a longish tradition, and then popularized via the lead character Fox Mulder on X Files. Fox is simple, sleek, and a little bit wild, and could make an interesting middle name.
            • Gaius
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Meaning:

                "to rejoice"
              • Description:

                Stately Gaius (pronounced GUY-us) was in the name of many ancient Romans, including Julius Caesar. Little-used before the year 2000, it now feels like a fresh possibility in the revival of Latin boys' names like Atticus and Cassius. Caius and derivatives like Caio come from the same root, and in ancient Roman times Caius was probably pronounced as Gaius. You could also see Gaius as a male version of the earth-goddess name Gaia.
            • Gillian
              • Origin:

                Feminine variation of Julian
              • Meaning:

                "youthful"
              • Description:

                Gillian is a name that was in common usage in Great Britain until the 1970s, when it dropped out of the Top 100 and is yet to return. Until recently, it had not crossed the Atlantic in significant numbers, except in the short form Jill.
            • Grace
              • Origin:

                English, virtue name
              • Description:

                Grace, a simple and pure virtue name which originally referred to divine grace, is a fashionable classic. In the early 2000s, it seemed headed for the Top 10 but pulled back from the upward trajectory, which you may consider a very good thing.
            • Gwendolyn
              • Origin:

                Variation of Gwendolen, Welsh
              • Meaning:

                "white ring"
              • Description:

                One spelling variation that's more popular than the original, this somewhat old-fashioned name might be in honor of poet Gwendolyn Brooks, the first African-American to win a Pulitzer prize for poetry, or may be a way to get to the modern short form Gwen.
            • Harris
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "son of Harry"
              • Description:

                When Harrison is too much, but Harry isn't enough, try this stylish surname name with a touch of British flair. It briefly reentered the US Top 1000 for the first time since 1988 in 2016, but has since dropped just below the radar again.
            • Hayes
              • Origin:

                English surname
              • Meaning:

                "hedged area"
              • Description:

                Hayes is a stylish surname name given to more and more baby girls -- nearly 100 in the US last year. That's a considerable number, but many fewer than the nearly 1800 baby boys named Hayes.