Scientist names

  1. Sigurd
    • Stanley
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "near the stony clearing"
      • Description:

        Although Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire personified brute force, most Stanleys have been portrayed as meek milquetoasts. It could be a Sydney-like girls' choice.-Bette Davis once played a character named Stanley, and it was the name of President Obama's mother (named for her father)--or possibly could be revived down the line a la Walter and Arthur.
    • Stephen
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "garland, crown"
      • Description:

        Stephen, also spelled Steven, is a strong and likable classic, with the he's-a-great-guy short form Steve. Though not as well-used or fashionable as it was in its heyday -- it was a Top 25 name from 1946 to 1957 -- it's still a widely used name. It remains an even more popular in Ireland.
    • Steven
      • Origin:

        English variation of Stephen
      • Meaning:

        "garland, crown"
      • Description:

        Steven, the phonetic and now predominant spelling of the classier Stephen, has finally dropped out of the Top 100 after seventy years. Steve has become one of the ultimate regular-guy names, right up there with Dave and Joe. and there have been innumerable pop-culture role models among its bearers--from Steven Spielberg to Steven Soderbergh to Steve Jobs.
    • Stewart
      • Origin:

        Scottish
      • Meaning:

        "steward"
      • Description:

        This ancient royal Scottish name and its equally-correct spelling French variation Stuart had a brief vogue in midcentury America--it was Number 286 in 1955--dropped off the list completely in the nineties.
    • Shamit
      • Siméon
        • Subrahmanyan
          • Tim
            • Origin:

              Greek, diminutive of Timothy
            • Description:

              Tim is a boyish short form very rarely given on its own.
          • Trygve
            • Victor
              • Origin:

                Latin
              • Meaning:

                "conqueror"
              • Description:

                Victor is one of the earliest Christian names, borne (as Vittorio) by several saints and popes, symbolizing Christ's victory over death. It has been quietly in the Top 200 since 1880, but just recently has taken on a cool edge by fashionable parents in London and seems ripe for a similar reevaluation here too.
            • Walden
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "valley of the Welsh"
              • Description:

                Walden is a recent entrant to the en-ending boys' names trend, a name that summons up placid images of Thoreau's two-year stay contemplating nature near Walden Pond.
            • Walter
              • Origin:

                German
              • Meaning:

                "army ruler"
              • Description:

                Walter was seen as a noble name in the Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Walter Scott era, but it then spent decades in baby name limbo. Now quite a few independent-minded parents are looking at it as a renewable, slightly quirky, classic, stronger and more distinctive than James or John, second only to William among the handsome classic boy baby names starting with W.
            • Walther
              • Werner
                • Origin:

                  German
                • Meaning:

                  "protecting army"
                • Description:

                  Formal name lacking any sparkle or sheen.
              • Wilhelm
                • Origin:

                  German variation of William
                • Meaning:

                  "resolute protection"
                • Description:

                  This dignified German form of William belonged to two German Emperors and Kings of Prussia, as well as a host of other important historical figures. These include composer (Wilhelm) Richard Wagner, philosophers Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz, and physicist Wilhelm Roentgen, who discovered the X-ray. It now sounds rather dated in Germany, however, having dropped out of the Top 20 there in the late 1920s and continuing to decline since.
              • Wilkes
                • Origin:

                  English, a contraction of Wilkins
                • Description:

                  Try Abraham or Lincoln instead.
              • Willem
                • Origin:

                  Dutch variation of William
                • Meaning:

                  "resolute protector"
                • Description:

                  Common in Holland, the appealing Willem (as in de Kooning and Dafoe) makes William fresh and distinctive.
              • William
                • Origin:

                  German
                • Meaning:

                  "resolute protection"
                • Description:

                  William is one of the most enduring of classic names for boys. It's also among the most popular boys' names, as American parents see it as being ideally conservative yet contemporary, and hands-down the most popular baby name beginning with W of all time.
              • Willis
                • Origin:

                  Diminutive of William, German
                • Meaning:

                  "resolute protection"
                • Description:

                  A common surname often used as a first among the Amish.