GT Names

Names associated with giants or tiny people, or names that mean "big" or "small". .Enjoy the puns!
  1. Arrietty
    • Origin:

      Literary name, variation of Harriet
    • Description:

      A pretty, dainty name for one of the little characters in the children's book series The Borrowers. It was the basis for a later Studio Ghible animated film, The Secret World of Arrietty. While the connection to Harriet is tenuous, you might want to consider Arrietty as an honorific for an ancestral Harriet, Harry, or even Henry or Henrietta.
  2. Atlas
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "bearer of the heavens"
    • Description:

      Atlas is one of those names that was previously thought too powerful for a baby boy, who would have to be strong enough to carry the world on his shoulders. Now Atlas has joined the pantheon of Greek and Roman god and goddess names in the realm of possibility, along with Mars, Zeus and Apollo.
  3. Anima
    • Anzo
      • Carina
        • Origin:

          Italian
        • Meaning:

          "dear little one"
        • Description:

          Carina is a pretty feminissima name whose fall from popularity may be speeded by similarity to (hurricane name) Katrina.
      • Cosette
        • Origin:

          French literary nickname
        • Meaning:

          "little thing"
        • Description:

          Cosette is best known as the heroine of Les Miserables. In the Victor Hugo novel, Cosette was the nickname given to the girl named Euphrasie by her mother. Although Hugo invented the name, some etymologists believe it's a spin on Colette, originally a female short form of Nicolas.
      • Cosmo
        • Origin:

          Greek, Italian, English
        • Meaning:

          "order, beauty, universe"
        • Description:

          We all heard it on Seinfeld as the long-concealed first name of Kramer, then considered a punchline. Now some pioneering parents are embracing this expansive Greek name, which makes a creative and cool choice for a baby. Influential celebrity couple Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost chose it for their son, born in 2021, which will likely drive Cosmo up in popularity. In the UK, it currently ranks within the Top 1000 boy names and is trending upwards.
      • Crane
        • Origin:

          English surname
        • Meaning:

          "crane"
        • Description:

          This elegant surname has great potential to turn into an unusual first name, especially with its literary associations to both Stephen and Hart Crane.
      • Cronus
        • Origin:

          Greek mythology name
        • Description:

          A Titan in Greek mythology, would not work in the modern world.
      • David
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "beloved"
        • Description:

          David is an enduring worldwide classic, used from ancient times to the present day.
      • Goliath
        • Origin:

          Hebrew
        • Meaning:

          "exile"
        • Description:

          Not a traditional biblical choice, but the Philistine giant isn't a bad character as such, just a champion fighter who lost to the underdog. He has given his name to everything from insect species to roller coasters. In a time when we're seeing more biblical names with chequered associations — Leviathan and Cain spring to mind — Goliath may appeal to some.
      • Gus
        • Origin:

          Diminutive of Augustus, Angus, Gustave, Augustin, Augusten, Augustine, August
        • Description:

          Gus is a homey grandpa nickname name that can work as a short form for any of the above or stand on its own as a cutting-edge replacement for Max and Jake--though it was off the Top 1000 from 1978 until 2016, when it squeaked in at Number 999.
      • 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.
      • Jaq
        • Margalo
          • Origin:

            Greek variation of Margaret
          • Meaning:

            "pearl"
          • Description:

            Margalo could make an intriguing spin on Margaret, with Margo as a nickname. The name appears in E. B. White's Stuart Little — as a bird. Margalo Gilmore (born Margaret) was a well-known British-born Broadway actress.
        • Oberon
          • Origin:

            Variation of Auberon
          • Meaning:

            "noble, bearlike"
          • Description:

            The Shakespearean character Oberon in A Midsummer Night's Dream is King of the Fairies, but the name, with its strong 'O' beginning, projects a far more virile image than that.
        • Paul
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "small"
          • Description:

            To the thousands of girls who screamed the name of their favorite Beatle in the 1960s, the boys' name Paul had a thrillingly unique image, but to the rest of the world, then and now, it's a name that's so simple and yet so widely diffuse that it could belong to almost anyone. Paul is an ancient name for boys -- popular in Roman and medieval times -- that's not very fashionable now, which can work in its favor, scarcity balancing simplicity.
        • Pauline
          • Origin:

            French, feminine variation of Paul
          • Meaning:

            "small"
          • Description:

            Pauline had its moment of glory almost a century ago, when movie audiences were thrilling to the silent serial The Perils of Pauline; it's a sweet and gentle name that just might be due for reconsideration. Off the list since the late 1990s, Pauline was a Top 50 name from around 1908 to 1930.
        • Rosette
          • Stuart
            • Origin:

              Scottish
            • Meaning:

              "steward"
            • Description:

              This ancient royal Scottish name had a brief vogue in midcentury America, but it would be far from a fresh choice for a baby boy now.