Latin Boys' Names

  1. Menelaus
    • Nemo
      • Origin:

        Greek
      • Meaning:

        "nobody"
      • Description:

        One of the best known early Nemos was the captain in Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea, while the more familiar modern one is the animated little orange fish in the Disney movie. Unusual name well worth considering. By the way, there is also a Shakespearean Nemo and one in Dickens's Bleak House. An enchanting early comic strip by Winsor McCay was called Little Nemo.
    • Nero
      • Origin:

        Latin
      • Meaning:

        "stern"
      • Description:

        The association with the infamous Nero, the fiddling Roman emperor, would be unavoidable. But there was also the detective Nero Wolfe, hero of many mystery stories.
    • Nicanor
      • Numa
        • Philo
          • Origin:

            Greek
          • Meaning:

            "loving"
          • Description:

            Could Philo be the next Milo?
        • Romulus
          • Origin:

            Latin
          • Meaning:

            "citizen of Rome"
          • Description:

            He was the original Roman, Remus's twin and a founder of Rome. But parents attracted to this name are advised to read the legend first. Romulus does have some less than savory characteristics, including killing his twin brother and making Rome in his own image, and is later deified as Quinnius. Romy and Quinn might make good twin names.
        • Sulla
          • Titus
            • Origin:

              Latin, meaning unknown, possibly "title of honour"
            • Meaning:

              "title of honour"
            • Description:

              Titus, once seen as a slightly forbidding Roman, New Testament, and Shakespearean name, was brought back to contemporary life in the USA by the TV series Titus 2000, increasing in popularity along with other revived ancient names like Linus and Silas.
          • Tycho
            • Origin:

              Greek
            • Meaning:

              "hitting the mark"
            • Description:

              Tycho and Tychon are Greek names with modern variations such as the Danish Tyge, the Swedish Tyko, and the Dutch Tygo that are popular throughout modern Europe. Tycho was the name of a Greek saint and a Danish astronomer.
          • Trajan
            • Ulysses
              • Origin:

                Latin variation of the Greek Odysseus
              • Description:

                Ulysses is one of the few U boys' names anyone knows -- with heavy links to the Homeric hero, eighteenth president Grant, and the James Joyce novel -- all of which makes it both distinguished and kind of weighty for a modern boy. Ulysses was on the US popularity list well into the twenty-first century; it's off now, but Number 684 on Nameberry.
            • 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.
            • Zeno
              • Origin:

                Anglicized form of Greek Zenon, related to Zeus, king of the gods
              • Description:

                Zeno, the name of two ancient philosophers, has a muscular dynamism that's lightened by its cheerful final vowel, resulting in a kind of offbeat sci-fi feel. Zeno of Citium was the founder of the Stoic school of thought, Zeno of Elea was another early, original Greek thinker, famed for his Paradoxes.