Names for a Boy Child

  1. Biagio
    • Blase
      • Bixby
        • Donald
          • Origin:

            Scottish
          • Meaning:

            "proud chief"
          • Description:

            Donald has been used for centuries in Scotland, where the Macdonald clan is one of the most ancient and where there have been six early Scottish kings by that name. Donald was a Top 20 name throughout most of the early twentieth century.
        • Gilbert
          • Origin:

            German
          • Meaning:

            "shining pledge"
          • Description:

            Considered ultra debonair in the silent-movie era, Gilbert then went through a nerdy phase, a la Gilbert Gottfried. Now though, like Albert and Alfred and Walter and Frank, it could be in for a style revival.
        • Miles
          • Origin:

            English form of Milo
          • Meaning:

            "soldier or merciful"
          • Description:

            Miles, which has a permanent veneer of cool thanks to jazz great Miles Davis, is a confident and polished boys' name that's an American classic. Always ranking in the US Top 1000, it's been drifting up the charts for the past half century but has never been TOO popular.
        • Milo
          • Origin:

            Latin and Old German
          • Meaning:

            "soldier or merciful"
          • Description:

            Milo is most commonly considered to be Germanic name derived from the Latin word miles, meaning "soldier." However, there is evidence to suggest it also may have independently spawned from the Slavic root milu, meaning "merciful." Milo predates brother name Miles, a variation that evolved when the name immigrated to the British Isles in the Middle Ages. Mylo is an alternate spelling.
        • Roland
          • Origin:

            German
          • Meaning:

            "famous throughout the land"
          • Description:

            Roland is a chivalrous old name made famous by the supposedly eight-foot-tall romantic hero and nephew of Charlemagne, celebrated in medieval poetry and song. It is more widely heard in the US now in its Spanish form, Rolando. You might want to consider rollicking short form Rollo, either on its own or as an abbreviation of Roland. Orlando is the graceful Italian form.