Names of Nobel Prize Winners

  1. Tadeus
    • Ulf
      • Origin:

        Scandinavian
      • Meaning:

        "wolf"
      • Description:

        A common Scandinavian name, but hard to imagine being used elsewhere.
    • Val
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Valentine
      • Description:

        Val Kilmer is so macho, you almost forget he bears this slight girls' nickname.
    • Vane
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "banner"
      • Description:

        He'll have to prove his humility.
    • Verner
      • Vernon
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "place of alders"
        • Description:

          Once aristocratic British surname yet to be revived. Vince Vaughn recently gave his son the same double initials as his own when he named him Vernon Vaughn.
      • Vicente
        • Origin:

          Spanish variation of Vincent, Latin
        • Meaning:

          "conquering"
        • Description:

          This classic Spanish name is well-used throughout Latin America and easily crosses cultures, ranking in the US Top 1000 for over a century. Vicente is notable as the name of Vicente Fernandez, the king of mariachi.
      • 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.
      • Vilhelm
        • Origin:

          German variation of William
        • Description:

          The way Wilhelm is pronounced anyway, so a pointless spelling variation.
      • Vincent
        • Origin:

          Latin
        • Meaning:

          "conquering"
        • Description:

          Vincent is a name with a complex image. After being quietly used for centuries, it is suddenly seeming stylish, along wih other V names. Even the nickname Vince has been given a reprieve via actor Vince Vaughn and country singer Vince Gill. Vin Diesel was born with the more prosaic name Mark Vincent.
      • Vitaliy
        • Origin:

          Russian variation of Vitalis, Latin
        • Meaning:

          "life"
        • Description:

          Lively Russian choice born by several saints.
      • Vladimir
        • Origin:

          Slavic
        • Meaning:

          "great ruler, peaceful ruler, ruler of the world"
        • Description:

          Vladimir is a cultured and deep-rooted Slavic name associated in this country with cultural figures including piano virtuoso Vladimir Horowitz and the author of Lolita, Vladimir Nabokov.
      • Walker
        • Origin:

          English occupational name
        • Meaning:

          "cloth-walker"
        • Description:

          Walker is both a Waspy surname name—as in the W in George W. Bush—but it also has a gentle ambling quality and a creative connection to such greats as writer Walker Percy and photographer Walker Evans, whose father was also named Walker.
      • 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
        • Walton
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "fortified town"
          • Description:

            Slightly more modern than Walter, but only just.
        • Warren
          • Origin:

            English from French
          • Meaning:

            "park-keeper"
          • Description:

            Long lingering in limbo, Warren suddenly seems to be on the cusp of revival. One of the oldest recorded English surnames, Warren's popularity in the U.S. dates back to the nineteenth century, and by 1921, reached its peak at Number 24.
        • Wassily
          • Watson
            • Origin:

              English and Scottish surname related to Walter
            • Meaning:

              "son of Wat"
            • Description:

              What with the resurgence of W names like Weston and Walter, the prominence of high profile actress Emma and golfer Bubba, and even the attention paid to Watson, the IBM computer on "Jeopardy" (named for IBM's founder, Thomas Watson) this name could be in line for a revival of its own.
          • Way