2022 boys singles

  1. Geraint
    • Hal
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of Harold and Henry
      • Description:

        Could Hal be the Jack, Max, or Gus of the future? It just might happen in the new nickname environment. Hank Azaria put it on his son's birth certificate.
    • Hawthorn
      • Origin:

        Spelling variation of Hawthorne
      • Description:

        The version with the e at the end relates to novelist Nathaniel, so that may be the one most parents attracted to this unusual name would choose. Hawthorn nudges it toward the nature category: Hawthorn is a type of hedge.
    • Hawthorne
      • Origin:

        English
      • Meaning:

        "lives where hawthorn hedges grow"
      • Description:

        The great American novelist sets this above many other surnames (and nature names, for that matter), but it's still an imposing and adventurous choice. Do nicknames Hawk or Thorne make it more approachable? The timid should stick with Nathaniel.
    • Helier
      • Origin:

        Jerrais
      • Meaning:

        "cheerful"
      • Description:

        Helier is the patron saint of the Jersey, one of the Channel Islands, and it is for him that St. Helier, Jersey's capital, is named. The name is related to Hilary, Ilario etc, and therefor shares their wonderful meanings.
    • Huckleberry
      • Origin:

        Word name and literary name
      • Description:

        Everybody knows Huckleberry Finn, the Mark Twain character named, Twain said, for the 19th century slang term for "humble." A few modern parents have put it on a birth certificate, including "Man Vs. Wild" star Bear Grylls, who, like many parents, will call the boy the much more manageable Huck. It was also the name of a child on TV's West Wing,
    • Idris
      • Origin:

        Welsh; Arabic
      • Meaning:

        "lord; studious"
      • Description:

        A name that crosses cultures, Idris was virtually unknown before the emergence of the charismatic Idris Elba, first on The Wire and then depicting Nelson Mandela in the acclaimed film.
    • Ilex
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "holly"
      • Description:

        The Latin name for the holly tree would make an interesting nature-inspired alternative to Alex.
    • Inigo
      • Origin:

        Basque, medieval Spanish variation of Ignatius
      • Meaning:

        "fiery"
      • Description:

        Inigo, almost unknown in the U.S., is an intriguing choice, with its strong beat, creative and evocative sound, and associations with the great early British architect and stage designer Inigo Jones. The sixteenth-seventeenth century Jones shared his name with his father, a London clockmaker, who received it when Spanish names for boys were fashionable in England, especially among devout Roman Catholics.
    • Ira
      • Origin:

        Hebrew, Sanskrit
      • Meaning:

        "watchful one; wind"
      • Description:

        Succinct and sharp, Ira is one of the shortest Old Testament names, belonging to one of King David's thirty 'mighty warriors.' It was widely used in the US from the 1880s to the early 1930s (it was Number 57 on the Social Security list in 1881), but fell off completely in 1993, only to return in 2016. Currently, it is in the latter half of the US Top 1000, given to around 260 boys each year.
    • Isidore
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "gift of Isis"
      • Description:

        Isabel and Isadora are back: could it now be time for a more widespread revival of Isidore? In 2014, both Isidore and Isadore were on the list of fastest-rising names in the US.
    • Iskandar
      • Origin:

        Arabic variation of Alexander
      • Description:

        Iskandar is one of the Arabic names for boysderived from a Western name.
    • Jack
      • Origin:

        English, diminutive of John
      • Meaning:

        "God is gracious"
      • Description:

        Jack may have fallen from its Number 1 place in England, but in the US it's as popular as it was at its height in the 1920s and 1930s. A durable, cheery, everyman form of John, Jack ranks as one of the most popular boy names starting with J.
    • Jaques
      • Origin:

        English and French
      • Meaning:

        "supplanter"
      • Description:

        Either an alternative spelling of Jacques (ZHAK), the French form of Jack, or a Shakespearean character from As You Like It, pronounced JAY-kwiss.
    • Jem
      • Origin:

        Diminutive of James or Jeremiah
      • Description:

        This name of the ten-year-old boy in the much loved and acclaimed modern classic To Kill a Mockingbird could find favor along with that of the character's sister, Scout.
    • Jude
      • Origin:

        Latin diminutive of Judah
      • Meaning:

        "praised"
      • Description:

        Jude is a modern star, maintaining a steady level of popularity -- but not TOO much popularity -- for more than a decade now. Thank Jude Law and the great Lennon-McCartney song "Hey Jude", double-handedly responsible for propelling Jude up the charts.
    • Jura
      • Keats
        • Origin:

          English literary name
        • Meaning:

          "kite"
        • Description:

          Poetic and easier to pronounce (it's keets) than Yeats (which is yates). This one of many poets' names to consider, such as Auden, Eliot, Frost, Byron, Lorca, Marlowe, Blake, Emerson and Tennyson, which was used by Russell Crowe.
      • Kip
        • Origin:

          American diminution of Christopher
        • Description:

          Kip Thorne, nobel laureate and long-time colleague of Stephen Hawking, is just one of several Kips who don't have a longer name.
      • Kipper