Simpsons Names

  1. Abraham
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "father of multitudes"
    • Description:

      Abraham is among the most classic baby names that's still widely-used today, popular for its references to both the Bible and American history. The Biblical Abraham was the first of the Old Testament patriarchs and is considered the founding father of the Jewish people. He was originally named Abram, until, according to Genesis, he was told, "No longer shall your name be Abram, but your name shall be Abraham, for I have made you the father of a multitude of nations."
  2. Bart
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Bartholomew, Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "son of the earth"
    • Description:

      Permanent property of that devilish little Simpson kid.
  3. Bort
    • Edna
      • Origin:

        Hebrew
      • Meaning:

        "rejuvenation, delight"
      • Description:

        Edna is one of those names that, until what it seemed like a few minutes ago, felt so terminally frumpy that no one could imagine a parent choosing it for an innocent modern baby girl. But with the great upswing in names honoring ancestral family members, several of them being other four-letter, e-ending names, we wouldn't be so sure.
    • Flanders
      • Homer
        • Origin:

          Greek
        • Meaning:

          "security, pledge"
        • Description:

          Homer is a name that has traveled from the ancient Greek scribe of the great classical epics to Bart Simpson's doltish dad, and has also become the surprise hot celebrity pick of such parents as Richard Gere (his father's name), Bill Murray, and Anne Heche. Simpsons creator Matt Groening has both a father and a son named Homer.
      • Jay
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "jaybird"
        • Description:

          Though this feels like a modern invention, Jay has been in use for centuries. Early Jays often were named in honor of founding father John Jay, whose surname derived from the jaybird. A popular mid-century choice, Jay was in the Top 100 from 1956 to 1970. In the last couple of decades he was replaced by such more elaborate forms as Jayden, Jaylen, and Jayce. But Jay could make a comeback in tandem with cousins May, Kay, Fay, and Ray.
      • Jojo
        • Lisa
          • Origin:

            English, German, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Italian
          • Meaning:

            "pledged to God"
          • Description:

            Elvis naming his daughter Lisa Marie and Nat King Cole's hit song "Mona Lisa" conspired to catapult one of Elizabeth's many offshoots to a high of #4 in 1970.
        • Louann
          • Origin:

            Compound name, a blend of Lou and Ann
          • Meaning:

            "strong in battle and grace"
          • Description:

            A vowel heavy compound name with sounds that are familiar but seem unexpected and interesting when placed next to each other. Louann did feature at the latter end of the US Top 1000 between the 30s and 60s, but in recent years, it has only been given to a small handful of girls. Still, with the look of Elowen about it and the sounds of Luna, perhaps there is still a future for Louann? A notable bearer is Dr Louann Brizendine, an American neuroscientist and writer.
        • Maggie
          • Origin:

            Diminutive of Margaret
          • Meaning:

            "pearl"
          • Description:

            Maggie is a cute, earthy short form that has been in style for several decades now, still sometimes used as an independent name by such parents as Jon Stewart. First used in Scotland, it got a large bump in popularity via the 1971 Rod Stewart hit song "Maggie May." Today's Maggie might just as well be short for a more adventurous name such as Magdalena or Magnolia as for the classic Margaret.

            Maggie Gyllenhaal was born Margaret.

        • Marge
          • Origin:

            Short form of Margaret, Greek
          • Meaning:

            "pearl"
          • Description:

            Marge used to be as common as Maggie or Megan, ranking on its own in the girls' Top 1000 from 1900 until right after World War II, when so many Old School names fell off the list in favor of a new generation cuter, perkier choices.
        • Montgomery
          • Origin:

            Norman
          • Meaning:

            "man power"
          • Description:

            This image of this distinguished Anglo-Scottish surname, drawn from the French place name of the ancient castle of Saint Foi de Montgomery, is rapidly shifting from fusty and formal to cool. And dashing short form Monty (or Monte) nudges it to cute.
        • Milhouse
          • Ned
            • Origin:

              English, diminutive of Edward
            • Meaning:

              "wealthy guardian"
            • Description:

              Ned is a gently old-fashioned Nancy Drew-Bobbsey Twins-era short form for Edward that sounds cooler than Ed and is enjoying a small style renaissance.
          • Patty
            • Origin:

              Diminutive of Patricia
            • Meaning:

              "patrician"
            • Description:

              Replaced Patsy as the midcentury's popular, peppy babysitter.
          • Rod
            • Origin:

              English, diminutive of Roderick and Rodney
            • Description:

              Macho-er than thou.
          • Selma
            • Origin:

              German
            • Meaning:

              "godly helmet"
            • Description:

              Selma has recently been given a more youthful spin via actresses Selma Blair and Salma Hayek. But while Selma has not yet become popular again in the US, it is widely used in both Sweden and Norway.
          • Todd
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "fox"
            • Description:

              A 1970s beach boy surfing buddy of Scott, Brad, and Chad, Todd is given to relatively few babies these days.