Names I like

  1. Abner
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "father of light."
    • Description:

      This neglected Biblical name--it was the name of the commander of Saul's army and appears twice in the New Testament--is ready to flee Dogpatch. It was regularly used in the nineteenth century, but was pretty much demolished by the long-running hillbilly comic strip L'il Abner, which began in 1934 and ran through 1977. A more respectable namesake is Abner Doubleday, who has been credited with inventing baseball.
  2. Asher
    • Origin:

      Hebrew
    • Meaning:

      "fortunate, blessed, happy one"
    • Description:

      Asher—an excellent, soft and sensitive Old Testament choice—is a baby boy name on the rise, and is a Nameberry biblical favorite.
  3. Caden
    • Origin:

      English, Celtic
    • Meaning:

      "battle; round, barrel"
    • Description:

      Caden is a key member of the rhyming contingent that includes Aiden, Jayden, Kayden, Brayden et al. It may derive from the Celtic Cadan or Irish Cathán, both from the same root meaning "battle". It is also possible it comes from Cade, meaning "round" or "barrel".
  4. Camden
    • Origin:

      American and British place-name, Scottish
    • Meaning:

      "winding valley"
    • Description:

      Camden is a surprise hit, probably as a result of some star baby cred: it has been chosen by no less than four celebrity parents since 2012. Gentle but not flimsy, Camden could be an updated spin on Cameron, Callum, or Caden.
  5. Camen
    • Eliot
      • Origin:

        Variation of Elliot
      • Meaning:

        "Jehovah is God"
      • Description:

        Sleekened spelling.
    • Emmett
      • Origin:

        English masculine variation of Emma, German
      • Meaning:

        "universal"
      • Description:

        Emmett, honest and sincere, laid-back and creative, is on the rise as a male cognate of the megapopular Emma and Emily, not to mention being a character in the popular Twilight series.
    • Emerly
      • Emil
        • Every
          • Gareth
            • Origin:

              Welsh
            • Meaning:

              "gentle"
            • Description:

              Gareth, the name of a modest and brave knight in King Arthur's court, makes a sensitive, gently appealing choice, used more in its native Wales than anywhere else.
          • Grady
            • Origin:

              Irish
            • Meaning:

              "noble, illustrious"
            • Description:

              Following in the footsteps of popular brother Brady, Grady is another lively, ebullient Irish surname name. The O'Gradys (originally O Gradaugh) were an ancient clan that produced an impressive number of bishops.

              Perhaps the most remarkable O'Grady descendant is Muhammad Ali, whose mother's maiden name was Grady.

          • Grey
            • Origin:

              Color name
            • Description:

              The girls have Violet and Scarlet and Ruby and Rose, but for the boys there's a much more limited palette of color names. Grey/Gray is one exception, which could make for a soft and evocative—if slightly somber—choice, especially in the middle. Kaitlin Olson and Rob McElhenney named their son Leo Grey.
          • Lawson
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "son of Lawrence"
            • Description:

              Appealing way, à la Dawson, to honor an ancestral Lawrence. Lawson is also an English pop rock band. Lawson has history or use that dates far back, but it fell off of the charts in 1950. The name resurfaced in 2001 and has been climbing since. Lawson has that surname feel and -son suffix that parents are loving in recent years.
          • Miles
            • Origin:

              English form of Milo
            • Meaning:

              "soldier or merciful"
            • Description:

              Miles, which has a permanent veneer of cool thanks to jazz great Miles Davis, is a confident and polished boys' name that's an American classic. Always ranking in the US Top 1000, it's been drifting up the charts for the past half century but has never been TOO popular.
          • Ross
            • Origin:

              English and Scottish
            • Meaning:

              "upland, peninsula"
            • Description:

              Like Friends, Ross is off the air and into syndication as a baby name, having plummeted from its zenith in the late 80s to fall off the US Top 1000 in 2013. Today, Ross is more likely to be a dad name than a newborn name.
            • Emerson
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "son of Emery"
              • Description:

                The combination of Emily and Emma's popularity -- and the fact that Desperate Housewives star Teri Hatcher's daughter is named Emerson -- have put this formerly strictly boys’ name, embodying the gravitas of Ralph Waldo Emerson, in the limelight for girls.
            • Everly
              • Origin:

                English
              • Meaning:

                "wild boar in woodland clearing"
              • Description:

                Sweet and stylish, with a sporty, energetic undertone, Everly is a name that ticks lots of boxes.
            • 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.