King and Prince Names Starting With A

  1. Austin
    • Origin:

      English, shortened form of Augustine, Latin
    • Meaning:

      "great, magnificent"
    • Description:

      Austin is one of the most attractive city names for babies, with an appealing southwestern feel and place-name panache.
  2. Austol
    • Origin:

      Cornish saint's name
    • Description:

      A handsome Cornish saint's name whose meaning is unknown. A more unusual alternative to Austin.
  3. Auston
    • Austyn
      • Origin:

        Spelling variation of Austin
      • Description:

        Nearly 350 babies were named Austyn last year, about a quarter of them boys.
    • Auther
      • Authur
        • Autry
          • Origin:

            French surname
          • Meaning:

            "noble strength"
          • Description:

            Loose, lean, and lanky cowboy-sounding names have become a recent trend, but how about the name of a real one--the Singing Cowboy Gene. Autry might be thought of as a masculine spin on the fashionable Audrey or a fresher version of Austin or Auden.

            Some other cowboy surnames from the Golden Age of movie and TV westerns: Boone, Boyd, Cody, Corrigan, Gibson, Hart, Holt, Houston, McCoy and Renaldo.

        • Auxerre
          • Origin:

            French, place name
          • Description:

            A picturesque city in eastern France that would make an unusual and stylish addition to the list of place names off the map.
        • Auðr
          • Origin:

            Old Norse
          • Meaning:

            "prosperity"
          • Description:

            In Norse mythology, Auðr is a male character — son of the night and uncle of Thor. However, even before its mention in the Prose Edda, Auðr was primarily a female name. It survives today as Auður, a feminine name in Iceland. Auðr was also the basis of several more familiar names, including Otto, Ottilie, and Odette.
        • Avan
          • Aveer
            • Origin:

              Hindi
            • Meaning:

              "strong, brave"
            • Description:

              A strong and handsome Indian boy name with a fitting meaning.
          • Avel
            • Aven
              • Origin:

                English, Norwegian, and Frisian surname
              • Meaning:

                "agreeable and handsome; from Ave; son of Ave"
              • Description:

                Aven is used as a surname in various countries across the globe, and occasionally as an Anglicized variant of the Irish girl name, Aoibheann. In the US, Aven only started to see significant use in the 2000s, and over the next two decades, it has slowly risen in popularity.
            • Avenir
              • Averel
                • Averell
                  • Averey
                    • Averil
                      • Origin:

                        English
                      • Meaning:

                        "boar battle"
                      • Description:

                        One of the rare English surname names originally derived from a female given name: Eoforhild, meaning "boar battle". Also spelled Averill, it's an extremely rare choice today, but shares sounds with fashionable Avery.
                    • Averill
                      • Origin:

                        English
                      • Meaning:

                        "boar battle"
                      • Description:

                        Averill is an ancient name, most properly spelled Averil, that has a Boston Brahmin air – probably due to the image of statesman Averill Harriman. It's of the rare English surname names that originally derived from a female given name: Eoforhild (Everild), meaning "boar battle".
                    • Avery
                      • Origin:

                        English
                      • Meaning:

                        "ruler of the elves"
                      • Description:

                        Avery is a unisex name that is used four times as often today for girls as for boys. But while Avery's popularity is starting to soften for girls, it continues to get stronger for boys -- in keeping with our finding that gender neutral names are becoming more favored for boys than for girls.