Names of Nobel Prize Winners

  1. Salvador
    • Origin:

      Spanish from Latin Salvator
    • Meaning:

      "savior"
    • Description:

      A common epithet of Christ, frequently heard in the Hispanic community, Salvador could also be a great choice for artistic parents, given the continuing popularity of Dada and Surrealist painter Salvador Dalí. (If Monet and Raphael get a look in, why not Salvador?)
  2. Salvatore
    • Origin:

      Italian variation of Salvator
    • Meaning:

      "savior"
    • Description:

      For every Tio Salvador in a Latino family, there's a Zio Salvatore in an Italian one. Having always ranked in the US Top 1000, it is in danger of falling off the charts very soon.
  3. Samuel
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "told by God"
    • Description:

      Samuel has been so popular for so long that it's hard to believe it's still climbing, at its highest point since the 1890s.
  4. Santiago
    • Origin:

      Place-name or Latin
    • Meaning:

      "Saint James"
    • Description:

      Santiago is a spirited Spanish name with great crossover potential. It's a place-name (a city in Chile), a surname, and the name of the patron saint of Spain.
  5. Sargent
    • Origin:

      Spelling variation of Sergeant, Latin
    • Meaning:

      "to serve"
    • Description:

      One of the few military ranks used as a name, as in Kennedy in-law and Peace Corps creator Sargent (born Robert Sargent) Shriver. There's also a more creative, artistic association with painter John Singer Sargent.
  6. Saul
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "prayed for"
    • Description:

      Jewish parents in particular may be drawn to this quiet, composed name of the first king of Israel and the name of Saint Paul before his conversion. In modern times, it has been associated with Nobel Prize-winning novelist Saul Bellow. Its meaning makes it appropriate for a long-awaited child.

      Saul is a character in a John Dryden poem, and heard in the Handel oratorio, "Saul."

  7. Scott
    • Origin:

      English
    • Meaning:

      "from Scotland"
    • Description:

      A cool, windswept, surfer babe-magnet in 1965, a nice dad -- or even granddad -- today.
  8. Seamus
    • Origin:

      Irish variation of James
    • Meaning:

      "supplanter"
    • Description:

      Parents who have tired of Sean are now contemplating Seamus, the Irish form of James, which has a lot more substance and verve.
  9. Seifert
    • 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.
    • Selman
      • Sen
        • Origin:

          Japanese mythology name
        • Description:

          Simple, Zen-like name of a mythological forest elf.
      • Serge
        • Origin:

          French variation of ancient Roman family name Sergius
        • Meaning:

          "servant"
        • Description:

          Old saints' and popes' name that went to France in the 1920s with the Russian Ballets Russes; in its Russian form, Sergei, it retains an artistic, almost effete air.
      • Severo
        • Origin:

          Italian and Spanish variation of Severus
        • Description:

          An old Roman family name that could easily be mispronounced to make it supersevere.
      • Sharp
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "smart, keen"
        • Description:

          An English surname originally given to someone quick-witted.
      • Shaw
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "dweller by the wood"
        • Description:

          With the current taste for last names first, this sounds a lot cooler than Shawn; it also has creative connections to the great Irish playwright, George Bernard Shaw, novelist Irwin Shaw, and Big Band Era clarinetist/bandleader and one-time Ava Gardner husband Artie Shaw.
      • Sheldon
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "steep-sided valley"
        • Description:

          Like Marvin and Melvin, Sheldon has been perceived as about as far out as you can get, though there are very pretty towns in Devon and Derbyshire that inspired it. Sheldon Lee Cooper is the lead nerd character on the TV hit The Big Bang Theory, giving the name a brainy image. Nickname Shel (as in Shel Silverstein, author of Where the Sidewalk Ends) could, in the modern world of nature name love, be seen as beach evoking.
      • Sherwood
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "bright forest"
        • Description:

          Unfashionable surname, best left in the forest with Robin Hood and his Merry Men.
      • Shimon
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "to be heard"
        • Description:

          Most parents would choose the more contemporary Simon.
      • Shirin
        • Origin:

          Persian
        • Meaning:

          "charming, sweet"
        • Description:

          An attractive unisex choice heard in several countries, including Armenia. Can be pronounced sheer-IN or sheer-EEN.